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Dear lovely readers and commenters:

I’m sorry I haven’t written for so long. I’ve missed writing to you all. I was just going through a dark place these past few months. You know how it is, I started to think things that even I don’t feel comfortable writing about—frightening, masochistic, sadistic, thoughts and feelings.

I told my psychiatrist. I know my warning signs. She wrote me a second prescription. I’m feeling much better now. In fact, I feel better than I did when I was a teenager. I feel strong and confident.

To be honest, I think that’s why I haven’t written as Tom Hardie for awhile. I mean, don’t get me wrong, Tom Hardie is a very real part of me. I imagine him as the gruff, tough wild man of the wilderness, ya know, that part of me that would not be broken when I was a child. The part of me that society caged away, deep in a small dirty closet at the base of my identity. Ursula LeGuin described little Tom Hardie’s reality best.

The door is always locked; and nobody ever comes, except that sometimes–the child has no understanding of time or interval–sometimes the door rattles terribly and opens, and a person, or several people, are there. One of them may come in and kick the child to make it stand up. The others never come close, but peer in at it with frightened, disgusted eyes. The food bowl and the water jug are hastily filled, the door is locked, the eyes disappear. The people at the door never say anything, but the child, who has not always lived in the tool room, and can remember sunlight and its mother’s voice.[1]

And yet, somehow, Tom Hardie survived in me. He became a man. He discovered his voice. He discovered he was naturally good with speaking. He loved to perform for people and make them feel things with his words.

But underneath all the partying and sex poems—there was anger. There was an old anger that I was afraid to let out. Do you know how that is?

Have you ever felt so angry that you honestly thought: if I let this out, I will fucking kill people. I lived in that place. I held all of my rage in. When I hit thirty-seven, I exploded. I couldn’t contain so much shit anymore. I needed a place to dump it. Hardhang.com was born.

This website represents the sum total of my linguistic working through, so far. The key to  beginning my recover from the trauma child abuse was so brutally simple. I had to prove to myself, intellectually, that I was not as horrible as I thought I was. The only way to do that, I figured, was to put myself completely out there.

I had to present the worst of my memories to the world—twenty-four hour free access to all of the thoughts and memories that I thought made me a horrible person.

I used doses of medical marijuana to loosen me up, and I just wrote. I wrote everything I could remember. I wrote until I thought I was going to vomit. I wrote for entire days without eating. I posted everything.

I wrote until I felt empty of it. I wrote myself in a deep depression of grieving. I cried every day for several hours. I lost my job. My family was furious with me. My personal relationships were stretched to the breaking point. Many of them broke. But I felt unburdened. I felt relieved. Throw in a little medical tweaking and I feel lighter than ever have as an adult.

The AA people would call this website my Step Four: Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves. In retrospect, I would have to agree. This is everything I can remember. Browse around. It’s as close to brutally honest as I could mister.

But don’t misunderstand me, I have a lot more internal baggage to search through. I don’t think my Step Four work is over, by any means. I don’t think the inventory ever ends for a truly ethical person. That’s what makes it so hard to be one, I think.

Anyway, I will still use Tom Hardie  to compile my inventory, but I will probably do some general pissing and moaning about the state of the world, also. Why? Because it’s healthy to vent.

Thank you for all of your time and attention in 2009. I hope to share more of my life with you in 2010.

Happy New Year!

-Tom Hardie


[1] “The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas.” Read it. It’s amazing.

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I’m irritated with therapy lately. I don’t know why I still go. I don’t know why I bother with the process.

Don’t misunderstand me. I think it’s valuable. I think everyone needs it. But I have been doing it for so long – seventeen years – that my mind just works psychotherapeutically.

I spend hours a day, every day, writing about everything that motivates me.  I write about what I remember and how it makes me feel. I write about how I think the past influences my behavior.

I’m constantly running to the computer. I have notebooks on me always. I think about associations, of what situations remind me of.

I do all of this reflexively. Then I go to a therapy session. I look at my therapist and think: She’s a nice woman. She’s smart. I like talking to her. But why do I need her, exactly?

I’ve been in therapy longer that I haven’t been. It’s like the process is part of me. It’s part of my consciousness. Sometimes it really annoys me.

I psychoanalyze everything. I can’t turn it off. Everything is filtered through the psychoanalytic model. I psychoanalyze authors. I psychoanalyze characters. I psychoanalyze movies and lovers and friends. What’s going on in their heads? How does it make them feel.

I psychoanalyze myself and my feelings. Ugh, my feelings! I’m so in touch with my feelings that it annoys me.

Day after day I’m exploding in fits – crying and raging. I feel like I’m vomiting.

And there’s no reason to it. I just get irritated by something small. I start screaming. I end up weeping. Then it’s gone. It just comes out of me.

Sometimes I miss my deepest depressions. I miss being numb.

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Sometimes I wish I had become a Buddhist monk. I almost did, once upon a time. I was bumming around in San Diego. I was lost. I had no idea what to do with my life. I found a local Buddhist center and started attending classes. That was where I met Geshe Tubpa. He singled me out and took me under his wing.

He said he was intrigued by my questions in class. He told me he saw the enlightenment in my eyes. He said my intelligence was getting in my way. He invited me to his private meditation sessions. We sat in silence for hours. We bowed to the potential Buddha in all of us.

Tubpa wanted me to be a teacher. Tubpa wanted me to write. Don’t try to change the world, Thomas. Just write about it honestly.

We took trips to the mountains to listen to rivers. I told him about Joy. She was in New Jersey in graduate school. She was going to join me in California in a year. We were going to get an apartment. We were going to get married. I loved her.

Tubpa always smiled. He adjusted his robes and advised me against attachment and craving. Just remember, Thomas, the person you love should not be a condition of your happiness. That’s a lot of pressure. And if that person dies, where will that leave you?

Joy didn’t die. She left me. She called me at 5 AM one morning. She was crying. She had been at a party the night before. She kissed another man. She was sorry. The distance between us made her too sad. Our relationship was ended shortly after that conversation.

Tubpa found me sobbing in the meditation hall. I was trying to meditate through my sadness. It was working. My face was soaked with tears. Tubpa asked me what was wrong. He sat down beside in a perfect meditation posture.

I stammered the story out and collapsed into his arms.  I sobbed all over his maroon and gold robe. My heart was broken. I was three thousand miles away from my family. The Buddhist center was my home. I wanted to hide there forever. I wanted to take vows and become a monk. I was tired of living in the world. I wanted to meditate. I wanted to focus on seeing things for what they really are.

I asked Tubpa to endorse me. It was the only way to be considered. My teacher had to endorse me. Tubpa said no. The monastery wasn’t for hiding. The monastery wasn’t my home. I was meant to live in the world. I was meant to be a teacher. I was meant to write. Tubpa sent me back to New Jersey, lost and broken hearted. I resnted him for years, but he was right.

So, last week, I lost my job. My superiors were offended by my writing. I wrote something that offended people enough to fire me. It happened to Walt Whitman once, too. I was a little excited.

My stories and my life are controversial. You have no idea what it was like to have a lot of people react that strongly to my work. It was the first time I ever felt talented. It was the first time I felt like I had a strong voice. It was the first time I ever felt like I could be an important writer. It felt so real. I think it scared me.

So, I have been a little blocked. I couldn’t think of anything to write.

I suddenly thought about what Geshe would say?  Just write something. Write anything. Write now. Don’t censor yourself. Don’t get hung up on labels like good and bad. Write your first thought and follow it.

I wrote about Geshe. And you just read it. Buddhism works.

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