Doormat
Cillian Mullen
You found me at a Goodwill
Down the street from where your parents grew up
And a block away from where you said your first words
Tracing patterns of ancient footsteps down the aisles
You found me on the floor, and nearly stepped on me
But you didn’t
You picked me up, dusted me off
You read the words written across my body outloud, “rain or shine”
I watched the crinkles of your smile crease your face for the first time
I blame myself for not remembering the pattern better.
You took me home
Well, almost
You took me to the front door
Two lights made the porch glow a rich orange I had never seen before
I was entranced by the color and drawn to the warmth
How lucky was I to even be sitting at your front door?
Even if I would never be allowed inside, I thought
I would stay here forever
And so I did.
That summer came and went
You picked raspberries that grew in the bushes right in your front lawn
Grass clippings got stuck between my teeth when you trotted your way inside
Your bellowing laughter echoing to absolutely no one but me, nowhere but here
The sweet sticky honey you got from your next door neighbor dripped onto me
And every once in a while you’d look down at me and smile, reassuring me I was doing the right thing
Because I had to be
If I was here with you, I had to be doing the right thing.
Or I thought
The first thing I noticed was your boots began to get muddier
When you carelessly wiped them across my face as you sprinted into the house
It was rain season, so I shrugged it off
You just wanted to get out of the downpour and get warm again
I couldn’t fault you for wanting that for yourself
I would have wanted the same thing if I had been you
But I wasn’t, I was a doormat.
Then when the rain died down, the snow came
I watched children crowd the streets as they pushed massive chunks of ice and snow off of the street and into the lawn
I would see you call to them every once in a while
The pink on your cheeks making you as rosy as ever
You were bundled up and layered to the point I could barely see your face
But I still recognized you underneath it all
Somewhere inside there I knew something familiar, someone recognizable
You rushed inside every time you came by, though
So I didn’t see it for a long time.
Then the snow melted, eventually
No more children wandered the streets and into our front yard
You always seemed to be out of the house and never lingered at the front door anymore
The hot air came back in time and with it the raspberry bushes began to show signs of life again
Their thorns reaching out and prodding at the world around them
The berries slowly but surely becoming ripe and ready to be plucked
They came, and they went, without anyone ever stopping to suck on their sweet but bitter nectar
You weren’t around enough for them to matter to you anymore.
As the heat of summer months trudged onward, you eventually came back
With you, someone else
A flowery voice and a laugh that sounded like home
Glistening hair that matched with the honeysuckle color of your eyes
The both of you could have been on the reality TV shows I used to watch through your window
It made perfect and complete sense to me
And otherwise, at least I was still here
Allowed to linger at your doorway and wait for the chance to possibly be invited in
Even if it never happened, the thought that it could kept me right where I felt I needed to be
But one day
You came home
Hand in hand, and hand wrapped around the handles of a large plastic bag
You dropped both, and put them on me instead
Grasping me on either side
“I can’t believe you’ve had it this long,” a voice cooed
“I know,” your voice replied, “I just didn’t know what to do with it until now”
You lifted me off of the ground
I was carried in your hands, and put into a container with the lid slammed shut
In the distance I could hear your laughter trailing off
I could hear the sounds of a broom sweeping across the ground, inevitably where I had once been
I could hear a door open, and then shut again
I could watch all of it, without needing to see anything at all, disappear as the world fell silent again
A year being a doormat, ultimately wasted to serve someone that would have never been happy to come home to me.
Cillian Mullen, Environmental and Arctic Studies senior at University of Washington.
The literary work I do surrounds my experiences growing up queer in small-town midwest, specifically Geneva, Illinois. This specific piece connects to the experiences that I had with trying to be palatable, lovable, and encapsulate my experience as being trans in a way that was catered to the world I was surrounded by. The way that I constructed my identity as a teenager was done in a manner to create something that someone else might want, something that was desirable and worth while for someone else. Experiences I had with love that came along with this greatly impacted me; they left me feeling empty, used, and oftentimes like I was worth nothing because I had never made my identity about myself. Instead, I constantly made it about everyone else around me. Doormat seeks to metaphorically synthesize a specific encounter of falling in love with someone and waiting until I morphed into something perfect, something they needed, until eventually realizing that I never could have done that.