Debbie Lechtman
Therapy
Vodka
The office is large but all I can
see is how it’s caving in. From the ceiling and from the walls, and I feel the
heat rising up my throat, tickling me, like a mild allergy to kiwi or
strawberries. Hmph, hmph, I try to cough, itch it from the inside. It’s not
working, though.
The shrink stares at me and her yellow eyes
burn holes right through my skin. I want to spit on her, say, look away! Look
away from me! You’re hurting me! But then she’ll really think I’m crazy, really think it.
I can’t go
back there, to the hospital. The loony
bin. I can’t go back. So I chew the inside of my lip until my mouth tastes
like metal, raw, and maybe this is how I’ll forget about my skin, how it burns
and sizzles every time she looks.
'You’re chewing your lip,' she says, and her
square, thick-rimmed glasses slip an inch down the bridge of her nose. The tip
of my tongue swells, and I clench my teeth so I don’t say it. D’oh! I’m chewing
my lip! I’m wearing shoes! My therapist just really likes to state the obvious.
I’m
crazy, not stupid.
'Tell me, Lana,' she says, her voice like
syrup. Sticky. My throat itches again, like ants crawling from the inside.
'Tell me what’s wrong.'
I don’t know. I don’t
know. I don’t know I don’t know I don’t know I
don’t know I don’t know.
I
need some air.
About The Author
Debbie
Lechtman is a 22-year-old writer and aspiring novelist currently living in
Connecticut. She posts her flash fiction at: www.debbielechtman.tumblr.com
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