CAPITOL // nathaniel mors pavot [fin]
Apr 9, 2012 19:58:59 GMT -5
Post by wimdy on Apr 9, 2012 19:58:59 GMT -5
I'll follow your every move
In a stride that wills disguise
Little markings clue the find
In a stride that wills disguise
Little markings clue the find
(name) Nathaniel Mors Pavot
(age) twenty
(gender) male
(role) assistant
(sexuality) straight
(hamartia) pushover
Your red lips speak of painted figures
The teeth of mangled little listeners
The thoughts that hide your rusty scissors
The teeth of mangled little listeners
The thoughts that hide your rusty scissors
(appearance)
(personality)
(history)
---
I love people watching. In my head, I can come up with a hundred different stories based off of one person's appearance, their attitude, the way they walk. I can contrive based solely on physical characteristics just what a person's life could be. Who they are is a completely different story. Who they could be, however, is something far more interesting. A person can seem to be anything they want. A shy girl can seem eccentric with florescent pink hair and outrageously high heels shaped like whales. A devious boy can seem meek with pastels and argyle cardigans. In my eyes, they can be whoever they want to be. They can fool me and take advantage of my ignorance to create a veil between themselves and the world. There are no bounds to who they can be to the world. There is no limit on what they can do, in the eyes of a stranger. They are completely free of being static in the perception or others. I can do the same. At least, I can try.
I've always towered over people. I'm taller than most people, not counting the platform-heel wearing bimbos and broads of the Capitol. Six feet and two inches isn't a bad height to be, although it comes with its trials. I've hit my head on far too many things to count, one of the most damaging of which left a light scar across my right temple. Being in the Capitol, I'm far from underfed, though I do manage to stay fit at about one hundred and sixty pounds. I can't say I'm in the best condition when it comes to health though. My skin is a bit pale, the dark moles that dot it contrasting completely with the pallor of my integumentary system. It also clearly points out my lack of sleep. With that lack of sleep comes bags. There's not much to be done about those, the drooping, darkened skin an eyesore. Literally. Often times, I feel like a zombie in my shell of a body. I'm sleep deprived and there's no way to stop that. It doesn't hold me back from functioning, but it just adds another element of stress to my already huge load.
Other than that, I would call myself average. I might not be typical in the eyes of the lavish and ornate Capitol, but I'm typical. My short brown hair is easy to tend to, though often unruly and uncooperative after laying in bed for hours. It sticks up at awkward angles and smooshes against my scale. The only time it actually is agreeable is after showering. My facial hair is another story. If I shave in the morning, I've got a full grown beard by noon. That's an exaggeration. I will, however, have a five-o'clock shadow by the evening though. My eyebrows are bushier than a woodchucks, but there's not much I can do about any of that. I suppose there is, actually, but I don't really put effort into my physical appearance. My brown eyes are hidden behind dreary eyelids and a sad smile. Their almost black shade isn't much to look at anyway. As for my grin, my teeth aren't the whitest of white, nor are they parchment colored. They are, however, perfectly straight. The things money can buy is a small novelty, but useful nontheless.
Where was your heart when we needed it most?
Live in denial and I'll be your ghost
There is nothing to let go
Live in denial and I'll be your ghost
There is nothing to let go
(personality)
I was once everything I am now not. There was a time when I could argue until the sun came up and always win. No one could out-speak me because no one could think ten steps ahead like I could. I saw how any minor shifts in a plan could cause a drastic reaction and knew just how to evade that situation. I understood how people worked, manipulated, and struggled their way to the top of the social food chain. For hours, I would sit and watch the people of the Capitol claw at each others' blind eyes with claws made of rhetoric and faux-kindness. Most importantly, I saw who people really were at heart, whether it be a bat out of hell or a kitten looking for a way to prove it was a cat. No one could hide from my eyes and expect to be able to win against me, not when I could think so complexly with ease. I got it from my parents. They were the paradigm that I wanted my life to live up to. I wanted their success, their prowess, and their happiness. However, when they went, so did my drive. Just like that, I was in a pit.
Presently, I am none of the man I was. That great arguer is gone. It's not that I don't have the ability. I just don't have the will. What is the point of creating altercations when it, ultimately, doesn't change who I am or where I am going or what I can do? I know that there is no chance of reviving my parents. There is no way to bring them back and right the wrongs. Never will I be able to avenge them in any way. I am powerless. I am a victim of the human condition of grief, unable to break away from the bonds of my sorrow. It is a double edged sword. Show no sadness and be considered heartless. Show sadness and be considered weak. I am weak though. I am not strong by any means of the word. Since their deaths, my parents have been haunting my in memory. It's the simple things that make it painful. There are days when I think I can smell the flowers of my mother's garden. If I close my eyes, I can almost imagine that I'm sitting within the poppies, watching as my mother tries desperately to uproot them. Sometimes, my father's old cologne washes through my senses, drowning me in the memories of him. I'm in his study arguing about the ideology of past rhetors and I can't help but laugh at our serious faces.
Clinically, I guess you could say I'm depressed. I can't think of them without getting emotional and blockading myself in. Moreover, I can't not think of them. Almost anything reminds me of them and the fact that they were taken, unceremoniously and without consideration for the effect on others. There are days where I can hardly move from my bed due to the shock of waking up and realizing that they won't be there, no matter how long they've been gone. I've lost the will to fight. I let myself get run over by any and everyone around me. I don't put up a fight, no matter how strongly I believe in something. I let myself be carried by the thoughts and ideas of others because my own are locked tight beneath my surface. I'm still intelligent. That's one thing that hasn't change. I still look ten steps ahead and try to find my way around possible problems. However, my carelessness and flimsiness has lead to others ignoring these warnings when I have them. My loss of will to argue has led to this. I simply don't take the time to make people see exactly what I can see and what they can't. That amount of effort takes far more thought and action than I've done in months.
I try to be a different man. I'm only twenty, but I live like an eighty year old with a thousand regrets and haunted memories. I try to put it past me in the only way I can; imitation. I try to make myself cold and callous and sarcastic, but I can't bring myself to be harsh to the world. The world, as a whole, is a newborn child. It is easily disturbed and constantly crying for attention, no matter whether or not it already has it. It is easily sated with the supplication of needs, though they are not the essentials such as food and water. It has a weakness for entertainment of any kind. I can't bring myself to judge and victimize something that literally has the attention span of a two-week old child. It's simply not in my nature. I may be a fighter of words, but I can never bring myself to hate.
Give up way too early
Let the axis turn you free
And destroy everything you love
Let the axis turn you free
And destroy everything you love
(history)
Every life has a story. There is a beginning, an conception that brings a former glimmer in the eyes of a couple to life. That sparkle grows and expands slowly and with careful guidance. It is nurtured by not only the proud parents, but by the community as a whole. That speck of light become a full blown star, shining and expanding and depleting energy sources. What was once a seemingly insignificant dream becomes a full blown goal for that being to achieve. It strives and reaches and strains to grasp its goal. Sometimes it is caught. Other times, it evades the desperately glowing ball and drains them of the strength to continue with other goals. Then, the star collapses in upon itself and is gone. Just like that, the once little shiny idea is less than it was before incarnation. It is nothing. It is dead.
---
There was a time when the flowers bloomed in the lull of sweet spring air, wafting the gentle mixture of fragrances through our back door and filling every corner of the house with its ambrosial scent. The heady perfume of hyacinth and lavender was soaked into ever nook and cranny throughout the abode. Tall sunflowers surrounded the entire area, turning to their deity with open petals and a desperate need for attention. Delicate forget-me-nots huddled in bunches, scattered around plots that swirled and meshed together. Petite pansies were mixed in with them, the vibrant colors melding with the hazy blue of the unforgotten blooms. Sharp white roses were planted in a corner all to themselves, their lack of color startling and refreshing all the same. Every color and hue was represented in the careful design just beyond our sleek home. The splash of color reflected off of our white house, transforming the once simple backyard patio into a beautiful rainbow dreamland. The subtle beauty of the flowers, though bright, was different from that of the technicolor attack of the Capitol streets. There was a peace that simply wasn't present out in the Capitol. A quiet serenity descended upon anyone who entered the garden.
There was a time when I'd sit in that garden for hours, watching as my mother nourished her blooms as if she'd been their seed-mama. She'd slave for hours over her precious hydrangeas and carnations and daisies, making sure they were all properly tended to and cared for. The scent was intoxicating and no matter how badly I wanted to walk away, I couldn't. I couldn't help but reach out to touch the delicate petals of the golden tulips and small lilies, but only after my mother had left to talk in the study with my father. I had a way of killing flowers, unintentionally of course. My mother had spent weeks trying to teach me how to care for her flowers as she did, but the plants would wither under my guidance. It took her several weeks more to coerce her blooms into health again, without my help. There was one flower, however, that never wilted in my charge; poppies. Mother's favorites were her poppies, their crimson petals fluttering in the spring air and swaying in the breeze. They clustered together and, in time, began to take over the entire garden. The other flowers would weep and bow themselves in resignation as the red blooms sprouted up within close proximity. In time, mother's garden was swallowed whole by the poppies. I suppose you could say that was foreshadowing for my future.---
I wish I could see back into the happy days of my infancy, back when my brother and I were first born. They say that there is a glow of pure life in newborns and their immediate families, a light that cannot be extinguished and that permeates all darkness. That light fades with time, it seems, as that pure joy did not encompass the whole of my childhood. That life is weakened with each passing day until it is snuffed out altogether. It was snuffed out rather early for me. In fact, it hardly lasted to the age of fourteen. Growing up, we were fine. We lived and we laughed and we loved, but we also lost. My parents had had my brother and I later in their lives, so our grandparents were older by the time we were eight. By the time we'd turned eleven, we'd had none left. It seemed that we were plagued with death between our grandparents and pets. Their flames were suffocated too early, too vividly in our young eyes. We faced the losses head on, our family closing in on itself with each wave of pain, but we survived. We were meant to survive and live. It seemed so.
My parents had both grown up being great arguers, something I had inherently gained from them both. Politics was the only natural occupation for them both to pursue. They could argue all day and then come back home to fight over the colors we would be painting the walls or where the desk should go or whether or not I should be allowed to shadow them at work. I tended to lend my own two cents to the last of the three subjects considering they concerned me. After years of fighting and squabbling over the matter, my mother finally gave in. At eighteen, just after finishing my basic schooling, I followed my parents into the world of vicious argumentation, money, and social status. Sure, I'd been introduced to it in minor doses as being a Capitolite, but this was a different thing altogether. This was the zenith of Capitol society and importance. With their guidance, I mingled and conversed and attempted to do what we politicians do best: schmooze. However, it seemed like my efforts fell on deaf ears and uninterested parties. That is, until Amadeus Shepherd arrived at the gathering. Despite the many people who tried to entice him into investing in their companies and products and futures, he chose to speak to me. I guess you could say that that was another shadow for the future, though it's one I can't bring myself to wish away, even now.
Words have an astounding effect on people when used correctly. They can build up cities and create fame and bring metaphorical wine to the masses. However, words are also devastating. They have an immobilizing backlash when used improperly, or more accurately, not to the pleasure of another party. My parents should have spoken more carefully. I'd known all of my life that they were opposed to the Hunger Games and completely against the continuation of Snow's reign as President. They died in a freak fire at their office in the middle of the Capitol along with twenty five other people. Devastation for me. Uninteresting gossip for the city. No one second guessed the fire. No one even cared that my brother and I had been left without parents and without future. Our aunt took us in, but it wasn't with whom we lived that mattered. It was the fact that we'd been wronged and neglected for the sake of someone else's career, someone else's power. No amount of anger or sadness could bring them back, just like no amount of work could remove all of the poppies from my mother's old garden. It was permanent. It was settled.
Days passed. Weeks. Months. My anger flickered and faded, but the sadness was overwhelming. The Hunger Games were a way to prove to the people of Panem that the Capitol, that President Snow, had control. This display of power and irrefutable control said far more to me. Putting children in an arena to fight to the death was nothing compared to carelessly offing my parents just because their words were less than agreeable in terms of the Capitol. There was no winning against Snow lest you wished to be buried beneath the avalanche. I knew there was no way to fight back. I didn't want to suffocate. It seems I didn't have to. I wasn't alone in my suffering, it seemed, even though the circumstances were different. Amadeus Shepherd, or Cerberus as he preferred to be called, had continued to keep in touch. It was an odd correspondence, but it helped me work my way through the trials of being a victim. It made me steel myself against the world. I tried to be as strong as him, though my efforts were more than lacking. They were half-hearted and weak, mere imitations of the person I wished to make myself. I let myself be bowled over time and time again, but I couldn't force myself to fight back. There was no fight left in me.---
Fighting. The reason I am, you are, he she it is what we all are today. The frivolity of life as we know it is made pointless by the very thing that gives it substance; conflict. Humans thrive off of attention and drama, no matter how miserable it eventually makes its craver. It is the most difficult drug to quit as it is introduced not to the brain, but directly to the very human nature itself, a nature that is comprised of selfishness and contrived invincibility. It is through selfishness that we make ourselves, and subsequently others, suffer. It is through our contrived invincibility that we take the hardest fall of all; death. That light that seems so bright is not as bright as it seems. It is not as strong as it is believed. It flickers, suffocating as the circumstances of its existence become shaky and unknown before the unthinkable happens. It goes out. After all, death has a way of catching up to us all.
The world looks better when you're falling
Grace to comfort, enough to crawling
Divided we must pray for the broken
No one can fix us
We are, we'll always be the wronged
Grace to comfort, enough to crawling
Divided we must pray for the broken
No one can fix us
We are, we'll always be the wronged
(song) The Broken
(artist) Coheed and Cambria
(faceclaim) Anthony Gastelier
(code) odair