The Weight of Quiet Regret: Solo story (Trigger Warnings listed in the first post)
Posted: 07 Oct 2024, 15:23
Trigger Warnings:
Depression and Anxiety
Alcoholism
Loss of a child
Divorce
Trauma and Emotional Abuse
Self-Destructive Behavior
Mental Health Treatment
Depression and Anxiety
Alcoholism
Loss of a child
Divorce
Trauma and Emotional Abuse
Self-Destructive Behavior
Mental Health Treatment
(What this story is going to be about: Marty has lived his life in the shadows of his past, of his mistakes, and of his own mind. Haunted by regret, he has shut himself off from the world, drowning in alcohol and self-imposed isolation. He hits a new low in the face of danger. As well his cat goes missing. But when a moment of unexpected kindness leads to the return of his beloved cat, Thomas, something begins to shift.
As he takes the tentative steps toward healing, Marty faces the daunting task of confronting the demons he’s been running from for years. With the help of therapy, and a deeper understanding of his own worth, Marty begins to rebuild his life, piece by piece.
The Weight of Quiet Regret is a story about loss and redemption, about finding light in the darkest of places, and about the quiet but powerful journey of learning to love oneself again.)
As he takes the tentative steps toward healing, Marty faces the daunting task of confronting the demons he’s been running from for years. With the help of therapy, and a deeper understanding of his own worth, Marty begins to rebuild his life, piece by piece.
The Weight of Quiet Regret is a story about loss and redemption, about finding light in the darkest of places, and about the quiet but powerful journey of learning to love oneself again.)
”The Weight of Quiet Regret”
In a drunken haze, Marty James lay sprawled on the couch. His body sunk into the cushions as though they were swallowing him whole. In one hand, loosely held, was the bottle of whiskey he hadn’t bothered to cap. It teetered in his grasp, the amber liquid sloshing quietly against the glass, mocking him with its half-empty promise of solace. He stared blankly at the television. His gaze was out of focus. The colors flickering across his tired, bloodshot eyes. Though he wasn’t watching, and if you asked him he probably couldn't even tell you what is on. He hadn’t really watched anything in weeks. The TV was just background noise. A distraction to fill the silence of his hollow life.
The blinds were drawn, shutting out the world beyond. Dust motes floated in the slivers of light that managed to sneak their way in. Like the ghosts of the life he used to know. It was late morning, though you wouldn’t know it by the dim, gray light filtering into the room. It could’ve been midnight, for all Marty cared. Time was irrelevant in this place, in this moment. His life here held no meaning. The walls felt close, suffocating. At the same time, this small, cluttered apartment was the only space he could bear to exist in right now. The world was too hard to face. With how he felt, he couldn't bring himself to even fake happiness. At home there was none to judge him for being drunk before noon.
The smell of blood and stale takeout lingered in the air. It mingled with the bitter scent of whiskey and the musty odor of unwashed clothes. On the coffee table, empty blood bags sat precariously atop stacks of unopened mail and forgotten bills. Marty’s whole life seemed to exist within the confines of this cramped room, collapsing in on itself like a black hole, pulling him deeper into its void. Marty shuddered with the thought. There was no escape here, and truthfully, he didn’t want one. So lost within darkness, there was no light in sight at the end of any tunnels in his life.
Thomas, his orange tabby, sat curled in a ball on the couch beside him. The only warmth in an otherwise cold existence. The cat’s soft purring was steady, a quiet reassurance that he had at least something in his life outside of booze and self loathing. Thomas stretched lazily, then padded over to nudge Marty’s leg with his head. Marty glanced down at him, feeling a strange pang of guilt. The cat was always here, always waiting, always faithful.
“I don't deserve you, my friend. Yet you still stick around, huh?” Marty muttered, his voice hoarse from a night of drinking. He tried for a smile, but it came out twisted, bitter. “Yeah, you don’t have much of a choice, do you, buddy?” He chuckled, but it was a dry, humorless sound.
Thomas meowed, as if in agreement. So Marty reached out a hand and absently scratched behind the cat’s ear. The contact was a brief reprieve from the emptiness, but it was fleeting, like everything else. He sighed, his gaze drifting past the cat, landing on the shelf across the room.
There, sitting on the edge, was a framed photo of his ex wife Grace. His chest tightened just looking at it. The glass was smudged, fingerprints left behind from when he’d picked it up. Drunk and desperate, in the middle of the night when the thought of Grace was stronger than the liquor he drank to forget. He never cleaned it. Unable to bring himself to touch it again. It was a relic of another life, a reminder of everything he’d lost. Everything he’d destroyed.” She loved me once.” Marty whispered, as he looked down at Thomas.
Try as he might to avoid the picture, his eyes quickly returned to it. Grace. God, how long had it been since he’d seen her? Her smile in the picture was soft. Her brown eyes bright with love. A love he’d taken for granted. A love he’d wasted. He’d pushed her away, drowned in alcohol and his own damn stubborn pride. Their daughter, he didn’t even get a chance to know her. He didn’t get to see her grow. Marty felt the familiar burn of regret coil in his chest. Sometimes it felt like the feeling lived there. Searing its way through him like poison, that there was no cure for.
Does she even think about me anymore? he wondered, as he took another long drink from the bottle. Liquor dripped down the side of his mouth as he pulled the bottle away. Or has she moved on, erased me from her life like I never existed? He couldn’t blame her if she had. He wasn’t worth remembering. Marty didn't think he was worth anything. He’d driven her away, after all, just like he drove everyone else away. ” They are all better off. “ His words a drunken slur, barely decipherable.
He closed his eyes, trying to shut out the thoughts, but they came flooding in anyway, unrelenting. It was my fault, wasn’t it? The drinking… the distance… ” I failed them all. “ He squeezed his eyes tighter, the whiskey bottle trembling in his grip. What would our daughter have been like? Would she have had Grace's eyes? My smile?
The silence was heavy, broken only by the faint murmur of the TV and Thomas’s rhythmic purring. Marty stared at the ceiling now. His head rested against the back of the couch. The drink was still in his hand, though he no longer cared about the burn as it slid down his throat, each time he drank from the bottle. What was the point of it all, really? Even if he got up, even if he walked outside, it was the same world waiting for him. He would be the same. The same mess he’d made of his life, the same suffocating weight pressing down on his chest.
A knock at the door startled him, pulling him from his spiraling thoughts. He didn’t move. Just sat there, staring blankly over at the door, waiting for the sound to go away. Praying that whoever it was just went away. It was probably the landlord, maybe a neighbor. Someone with some petty grievance or a bill he’d forgotten to pay. It didn’t matter. He wasn’t going to answer. After a moment, the knocking stopped, and he heard the soft shuffle of footsteps retreating down the hall.
For a moment he felt a brief sense of relief. He sighed, letting the tension slip from his shoulders. Alone again. Just the way he wanted it.
He raised the bottle to his lips once more, taking another long swig, letting the warmth of the alcohol numb him further. With his free hand Marty took up the remote to shut off the TV. It took him a moment, but once he faced the remote in the right direction the room held a new level of quiet, the only sound the faint purring of Thomas, still nestled at his side. Outside, the world moved on without him. Inside, Marty James drowned, slowly and quietly, in the life he had built out of broken dreams and shattered promises. ”I brought this on myself.” He muttered under his drunken breath.
The light from the window barely touched the room, thin beams straining to break through the closed blinds. It was a sad thing, Marty thought, that the sun still bothered trying to shine. It had no business here, in this place, in his life. I'm nothing but a black cloud. He thought.
Marty stared at the blinds, thinking about how long it had been since he’d opened them, since he’d let any light in. He couldn’t remember the last time he’d stepped outside. He figured what was there for him, anyway? He’d tried to outrun the ghosts of his past, but they were always waiting. Always just behind him, no matter how far he fell or how deep he sank.
What’s the point of trying to fix any of this? he thought, his grip on the whiskey bottle tightening. I’m too far gone. It’s too late to change.
And so he sat there, wallowing in self-pity, letting the weight of his mistakes bury him deeper into the couch. deeper into the darkness he’d come to know so well. The world outside might as well have been a distant dream, one he no longer had any place in. To Marty, there was no place for him. In his mind, he was nothing but complete ruin.
To be continued...
The blinds were drawn, shutting out the world beyond. Dust motes floated in the slivers of light that managed to sneak their way in. Like the ghosts of the life he used to know. It was late morning, though you wouldn’t know it by the dim, gray light filtering into the room. It could’ve been midnight, for all Marty cared. Time was irrelevant in this place, in this moment. His life here held no meaning. The walls felt close, suffocating. At the same time, this small, cluttered apartment was the only space he could bear to exist in right now. The world was too hard to face. With how he felt, he couldn't bring himself to even fake happiness. At home there was none to judge him for being drunk before noon.
The smell of blood and stale takeout lingered in the air. It mingled with the bitter scent of whiskey and the musty odor of unwashed clothes. On the coffee table, empty blood bags sat precariously atop stacks of unopened mail and forgotten bills. Marty’s whole life seemed to exist within the confines of this cramped room, collapsing in on itself like a black hole, pulling him deeper into its void. Marty shuddered with the thought. There was no escape here, and truthfully, he didn’t want one. So lost within darkness, there was no light in sight at the end of any tunnels in his life.
Thomas, his orange tabby, sat curled in a ball on the couch beside him. The only warmth in an otherwise cold existence. The cat’s soft purring was steady, a quiet reassurance that he had at least something in his life outside of booze and self loathing. Thomas stretched lazily, then padded over to nudge Marty’s leg with his head. Marty glanced down at him, feeling a strange pang of guilt. The cat was always here, always waiting, always faithful.
“I don't deserve you, my friend. Yet you still stick around, huh?” Marty muttered, his voice hoarse from a night of drinking. He tried for a smile, but it came out twisted, bitter. “Yeah, you don’t have much of a choice, do you, buddy?” He chuckled, but it was a dry, humorless sound.
Thomas meowed, as if in agreement. So Marty reached out a hand and absently scratched behind the cat’s ear. The contact was a brief reprieve from the emptiness, but it was fleeting, like everything else. He sighed, his gaze drifting past the cat, landing on the shelf across the room.
There, sitting on the edge, was a framed photo of his ex wife Grace. His chest tightened just looking at it. The glass was smudged, fingerprints left behind from when he’d picked it up. Drunk and desperate, in the middle of the night when the thought of Grace was stronger than the liquor he drank to forget. He never cleaned it. Unable to bring himself to touch it again. It was a relic of another life, a reminder of everything he’d lost. Everything he’d destroyed.” She loved me once.” Marty whispered, as he looked down at Thomas.
Try as he might to avoid the picture, his eyes quickly returned to it. Grace. God, how long had it been since he’d seen her? Her smile in the picture was soft. Her brown eyes bright with love. A love he’d taken for granted. A love he’d wasted. He’d pushed her away, drowned in alcohol and his own damn stubborn pride. Their daughter, he didn’t even get a chance to know her. He didn’t get to see her grow. Marty felt the familiar burn of regret coil in his chest. Sometimes it felt like the feeling lived there. Searing its way through him like poison, that there was no cure for.
Does she even think about me anymore? he wondered, as he took another long drink from the bottle. Liquor dripped down the side of his mouth as he pulled the bottle away. Or has she moved on, erased me from her life like I never existed? He couldn’t blame her if she had. He wasn’t worth remembering. Marty didn't think he was worth anything. He’d driven her away, after all, just like he drove everyone else away. ” They are all better off. “ His words a drunken slur, barely decipherable.
He closed his eyes, trying to shut out the thoughts, but they came flooding in anyway, unrelenting. It was my fault, wasn’t it? The drinking… the distance… ” I failed them all. “ He squeezed his eyes tighter, the whiskey bottle trembling in his grip. What would our daughter have been like? Would she have had Grace's eyes? My smile?
The silence was heavy, broken only by the faint murmur of the TV and Thomas’s rhythmic purring. Marty stared at the ceiling now. His head rested against the back of the couch. The drink was still in his hand, though he no longer cared about the burn as it slid down his throat, each time he drank from the bottle. What was the point of it all, really? Even if he got up, even if he walked outside, it was the same world waiting for him. He would be the same. The same mess he’d made of his life, the same suffocating weight pressing down on his chest.
A knock at the door startled him, pulling him from his spiraling thoughts. He didn’t move. Just sat there, staring blankly over at the door, waiting for the sound to go away. Praying that whoever it was just went away. It was probably the landlord, maybe a neighbor. Someone with some petty grievance or a bill he’d forgotten to pay. It didn’t matter. He wasn’t going to answer. After a moment, the knocking stopped, and he heard the soft shuffle of footsteps retreating down the hall.
For a moment he felt a brief sense of relief. He sighed, letting the tension slip from his shoulders. Alone again. Just the way he wanted it.
He raised the bottle to his lips once more, taking another long swig, letting the warmth of the alcohol numb him further. With his free hand Marty took up the remote to shut off the TV. It took him a moment, but once he faced the remote in the right direction the room held a new level of quiet, the only sound the faint purring of Thomas, still nestled at his side. Outside, the world moved on without him. Inside, Marty James drowned, slowly and quietly, in the life he had built out of broken dreams and shattered promises. ”I brought this on myself.” He muttered under his drunken breath.
The light from the window barely touched the room, thin beams straining to break through the closed blinds. It was a sad thing, Marty thought, that the sun still bothered trying to shine. It had no business here, in this place, in his life. I'm nothing but a black cloud. He thought.
Marty stared at the blinds, thinking about how long it had been since he’d opened them, since he’d let any light in. He couldn’t remember the last time he’d stepped outside. He figured what was there for him, anyway? He’d tried to outrun the ghosts of his past, but they were always waiting. Always just behind him, no matter how far he fell or how deep he sank.
What’s the point of trying to fix any of this? he thought, his grip on the whiskey bottle tightening. I’m too far gone. It’s too late to change.
And so he sat there, wallowing in self-pity, letting the weight of his mistakes bury him deeper into the couch. deeper into the darkness he’d come to know so well. The world outside might as well have been a distant dream, one he no longer had any place in. To Marty, there was no place for him. In his mind, he was nothing but complete ruin.
To be continued...