Living in Present Tents

Transience in my year away from home

By Nina Murray; illustration by Kelsey Skordal

I am terrified of the dark. Or, rather, of being utterly and completely alone in the dark. I blame my best friend, who forced me to watch horror movies on Halloween when we were in eighth grade. I haven’t been able to handle the darkness alone since.

The real beginning of this story isn’t eighth grade. It’s my junior year of high school. I’m sixteen years old and everything is falling apart. 

My junior year, 2010 to 2011: my parents were together, I had a boyfriend I loved (or so I thought) and I had a solid group of friends. I went off for my spring semester to High Mountain Institute (ever heard of it?) and returned to an empty house with an exhausted heart. 

In the same way that television shows build up storylines in order to tear them down, so went my sixteenth year. In four months, I broke up with my high school boyfriend, my parents told me that they were separating after giving me and my sister no indication that anything was wrong, and my entire extended family decided that they all had an opinion about the divorce and they were going to tell me about it. God damn it.

I was depressed during the summer after my junior year and for most of my senior year—most of 2011 and 2012. I tried on self-destruction to see if it fit, but it didn’t work as well as I’d hoped. It would seem that my controlling nature came out and forced me to regulate how much alcohol and weed I would consume. I would usually drink wine with my mom, watch “Downton Abbey” and try not to think about our empty house.

I spent that summer after junior year staring at the dark shapes on my ceiling and talking to my new HMI boyfriend (I move fast). I distanced myself from my friends, hoping not to infect them with my despair. I didn’t realize until later that passively watching these relationships crack and fall apart made me an active participant in their destruction. I read the Harry Potter series over and over until my mom noticed me crying for no apparent reason while I read and strongly encouraged (re: drove and walked me in) therapy. So I went.

Once I started school again, all I could think was: “Fuck this.” I had gone to the same school for 13 years, I was so done with this shit. Which brings us to my gap year. The idea of a gap year, a space to breathe and calm down, began to bounce around my brain. It grew stronger and louder until it convinced me. 

I forced my parents to accept my gap year through a combination of youngest child manipulation and separation guilt. 

My mother asked me,  “What do you even plan on doing? You can’t stay here all year.”

“As if I’d want to. I already applied to a gap year program called Where There Be Dragons. They have programs all over the world, but I want to do the course in Bolivia and Peru in the fall.”

“Then what?”    

“I was thinking of going to that spiritual retreat outside of Ojai, California in March and doing their work exchange program for a month. You work a few hours a day and you get to live on their land. We’ll see what happens after that.”

 “You’re going to do this alone?”

I left L.A. two days after I graduated and didn’t return for six months. I spent those first months of my gap year living out of my backpack, out of hostels, out of home stays. I was a vagabond, and I loved and hated it. I wanted to stay away, but the umbilical cord of home always tugged me back. It was so easy to fall back into routine, into my typical relationship with my mother, the only person left at 1001 Las Pulgas Rd. However, I couldn’t go home because I wouldn’t let myself.

It’s the fall of my gap year, 2012. I’m standing in a tiny phone booth in the city of La Paz, Bolivia, and I’m sobbing into the phone to my mom. Walking down the stairs of my hostel into the Internet café next door sapped all my energy, and I’m exhausted. I can’t walk or stand for very long, and I’ve hiked to the bathroom down the hall so many times I start crawling there. She says, “Nina, please come home. You’re so sick with so many parasites.” But I can’t leave yet. I will go to the hospital so many times in the three months that I’m in Bolivia that the instructors of my course will just shake their heads and sigh when they decide that I have to go to the ER again. But again, I don’t leave. I’m not that kind of girl.

I needed to breathe, I told people who asked me why I left, but really, what I needed was to run away and not look back for a while. So I did.

I’m fine being alone. I really am. It’s the spring of my gap year, 2013, and I’m living by myself in a tent on a spiritual retreat in Ojai, California. My campsite is called Moonrise, and I can’t think of a more beautiful name for such a beautiful place. 

I’m alone at this campsite called Moonrise in more than one sense. It’s the first time in almost two-and-a-half years that I have not been in some sort of romantic relationship. I’m trying not to think about it.

I begin unpacking my huge red backpack and taking my stuff out. I start setting the tent up, the one I’m so proud of, the one I had bought with my own money from REI a week before.

Two weeks before I left for the spiritual retreat in Ojai, I walked into the Outdoor Education office at my alma mater and asked to borrow a tent to live in for a month. They very kindly refused. One of the guys working there told me, “Just buy your own tent. It’s kind of like buying your first home.”

I think about this interaction as I unfold the poles to my tent. Once I get it all set up, I look at it and think: home. It’s not quite right. Not yet. 

My real home is about two hours south of that campsite. My real home has neither my father nor my sister inside it. My real home is hard for me to be in because I remember the couch I sat on while my parents told me they were breaking up and my ears decided to stop working. I remember my childhood bedroom, where I would sneak out the window to smoke weed with my boyfriend. My home is full of too many translucent memories, floating in and out of focus every once in a while. So I left.

I’m looking around my campsite called Moonrise, and a familiar thought occurred to me: “What the fuck are you doing here?” I asked myself that question when I was riding my bike to school in Bolivia and getting chased by at least seven of the neighborhood dogs. I asked myself that question when I was driving to a music festival in Tennessee with two girls from Denver that I’d never met before. I will ask myself that question many more times. 

Instead of running after my mother’s Honda that’s already halfway back to L.A., I ignore the thoughts that urge me “just go home, it would be so easy.“ I’m not that kind of girl, you see. I don’t give up very easily.

What scared me the most was the not knowing. Not knowing whether I’d be okay, not knowing where I’d be in a month. Not knowing anyone when I looked around any of the people who surrounded me, and who, in time, I came to consider family. 

I never knew what was going to happen next and it was fucking terrifying—and wonderful.

And so I found myself, alone, in a campsite called Moonrise, thinking, “How the fuck did I get here?” when, really, I knew exactly how I got there. I had decided, consciously or subconsciously, that L.A. equaled depression, and in order to recover, I had to leave. So I did.

I learned to close my eyes and say in my tiny tent in Ojai: “It’s okay.” 

I grew up. I cooked for myself, worked at the retreat, did some sweeping and gardening a few hours a day, and entertained myself when I wasn’t working. I was 18-years-old and laying in a hammock listening to podcasts about history. I thought about how perfect the moment, the light and the feeling was. I would touch my arm and think how good, how kind, my own touch was.

I’m not 18 anymore. I’m still terrified of the dark. I went on an Outward Bound trip over Spring Break, my first, and my stomach dropped when I heard we had to go on a solo trip. So, I gathered wood and cooked dinner and made my shelter and told myself it was giants bowling when the ice was cracking and refreezing louder than any stereo system, and I realized that I couldn’t sleep because my thoughts wouldn’t whisper me to sleep. I snuggled down in my double sleeping bag and thought: home.

Oy Vey, CCSGA

How in an elected body of 20 college students can you get a Finance Representative who isn’t pressured to resign until two and a months after signing away $4,500 dollars in student activities fee funds without seeking permission, a Vice President of Finance who is unconstitutionally off campus for more than one block of the year and a president who gives $20,000 to the Butler Center as a “gift to the community,” despite never being asked to do so by any Butler Center representative, all without any vote from the student body?

If you answered this brainteaser with “The 2014-2015 Colorado College Student Government Association (CCSGA) Executive Council,” you’re correct.  

Beer and Loathing

I am sitting with a rare specimen on a Saturday afternoon—Coll Junior Tompson (CJ), a first-year Las Vegas native. We are perusing the Buzzfeed list “28 Signs You Grew Up in Las Vegas,” which CJ claims he’s never read. After a few halfhearted chuckles at jokes about rain in the Mojave Desert and stripper schools, we stop scrolling at #20: 

 

20. You were taught all the words to “Home Means Nevada” in elementary school and could probably recite the whole thing right now. 

Uprooted

During my freshman year someone asked me about Maryland, “Why would anyone want to go there?” Sitting at a dining hall table at Elon University, a school that did not meet the “college is the best four years of your life” criteria I had imagined, I could only think to say, “Well its better than here."

How to Break a Bone

A bone fracture (sometimes abbreviated FRX or Fx) is a medical condition in which there is a break in the continuity of the bone. A bone fracture can be the result of high force impact or stress, or trivial injury as a result of certain medical conditions that weaken the bones, such as osteoporosis, bone cancer or osteogenesis imperfecta, where the fracture is then properly termed a pathologic fracture. 

She runs her fingers through her hair, tilts her head and says, “Someone said to me, ‘I think you have been [sexually] assaulted’ and I was like, ‘What? No, surely not.’ And that was the paradigm shift and that’s when I really started questioning everything that had happened.”

Cost-Benefit Analysis

The Colorado College Department of Residential Life Resident Advisor Contract explains that RAs are responsible for “implementing the mission of the department.” These requirements emphasize the effort to create a sense of community and promote student success. RAs are expected to serve as positive role models in their communities, follow the leadership of their RLC and enforce Colorado College policies. Furthermore, the contract explains “this position takes precedence over all other commitments, excluding academic coursework.” 

I was first introduced to this three-page contract before the second semester of the 2014-2015 school year. Although expected that to read the entire contract, I was never tested on its content.

Just Friends

Alisa sighed my name softly as I kissed her neck, gripped my arm so hard her nails dug into my skin, told me she loved me as she guided my hands up her stomach. This wasn’t the lead-up to anything. It just was. 

She fucked skinny redheaded boys and plaid-wearing heroin users. I fucked self-proclaimed critical theorists who made self-deprecating dick jokes and girls who cried after sex every time because they didn’t want to be gay. 

The Holy Foreskin

I shoved my way onto a crowded moving walkway, craned my neck upward, and there she was: El Virgen de Guadalupe. Within 30 seconds, the moving walkway ended, and she was no longer in sight. I was in a crowded church in Mexico City, where I was surrounded by hundreds of admirers, to get a good look at the tapestry where, legend has it, the Virgin of Guadalupe appeared in 1531.

A Summer of Kink

Aaron and Annemarie are young, beautiful, punk and very much in love. It's a love their extended social circles are frequently reminded of, for rarely a day passes without a social media post celebrating it. I recently awoke to a picture of them on Aaron’s Instagram of Annemarie sprawled on their bed with her thumb in her mouth, looking softly at the camera. Caption: “ Annemarie got a raise and makes more money than me, and I couldn't be more proud or in love. Now what cuties are gonna give her kisses to celebrate with me?” Seventy-four likes as of 7:15 a.m.

Oscar Scandal

How should you respond when nude photos of your best friend get leaked? I asked myself this just a few weeks ago when the dignity of someone very close to me was violated.

Meet Oscar. He’s not the typical Palo Alto resident. He never applied to Stanford, nor is it likely that he ever will. He does not know how to code. Nor has he ever stepped foot in Whole Foods. This is because Oscar has no feet with which to take steps. Instead, Oscar was born with four paws. 

Sleeping Beauty

Someday, you will die. If your body is handled like that of most Americans, you will be placed in the care of a funeral parlor. You will be embalmed as soon as possible in order to keep your appearance as lifelike as possible. Most funeral parlors strongly recommend or require embalming for an open-casket funeral which, on top of siphoning hundreds of dollars to the parlor from your grieving family, also ensures that you will look and smell your very best for your funeral.

26.2 Miles

The first person to ever run a marathon died. After Pheidippides completed his famous 26.2 mile journey from Marathon to Athens to report the defeat of the Persian Army, he gasped out his famous last words: “Rejoice, we conquer!” Death is the least likely on the long and painful list of potential injuries that long-distance runners face. Most of these injuries don’t go away on their own, and require expensive physical therapy or surgery—and that’s only for immediate treatment. And yet, we live in a society where exercise is thrust upon us as the answer to all of our physical and mental health problems.