Wednesday, May 2, 2018

Sad Sailor Moon Stories


Sailor Moon has always meant more to me than the surface story it delivers. Having grown up not to believe in or understand love, from poor modeling or abuse, Sailor Moon was my reference point for love. It was where I began to understand what love was. At its core, it was the idea that love not only exists, but that it had a tangible power. This was also a time in my life where my mother was once again in jail (with work release). She would only come home long enough to bark out commands and drop her anger and resentment on me. This is just after she spent eight months in prison for an arrest she blamed on me. The abuse was the worst leading up to this. While she was gone, I was forced into her role in the house. However, doing so allowed me to develop into my own person. That time transformed me from the timid, quiet, unsure boy terrified of his tyrant mother into someone who knew that strength was the only way I could make it through that time. I knew that how I was raised was not the way it should be. With no friends; no family to rely on (my father failed this time too) I knew that it was only me that I could rely on. When she got back, I would no longer take her shit. I would never again allow her to lay a hand on me. The next year she was in county lockup. I was again picking up her slack at home. I had grown into a stubborn, mouthy teen who had worked his balls up. She could no longer deal with me as she had before. She was pissed and scared of once again being in the system. I was a convenient target due to the circumstances of her prison stay arrest. She thought I would be that target again. And I multiplied her anger and fear by no longer being her target. I could no longer be her punching bag and sounding board for anger issues. I had plenty of my own genetic/environment/puberty enhanced anger issues to deal with.
            None of this gave me any idea or foundation for what love was. I turned to my imaginary worlds that had always served as my escape. In all of them I had always gleaned some perception of truth. It was this time that I came to Sailor Moon.
The new pubescent, cocksure Ryan began to branch out. I started to make some new friends, probably the first I ever had. I had my first awkward stumblings into physical attraction. At this cusp in my life, when I was seeking some sign of something better, something to fill the void of lonely, emotional nihilism in came a hero: a pretty girl in a Sailor skirt who fought all the evils of the world with love. It didn’t matter that she wasn’t real. I fell in love.
There was a better way. Sailor Moon and her silver crystal were my guiding light. I was not so disconnected with reality that I did not know it was a fantasy. But, it felt more real than this world. I can live in several realities (mentally) simultaneously. I have such a vivid, manic imaginary world-mind that each of my billions of fantasy universes feel just as real to me. I still have the knowledge of what is real and what is not. I am starkly aware of this shitty reality. My approach was always to pick which parts of those fantasies I wanted to create; to manifest in my world; to display, to tell that story in my art and life.
Sailor Moon was a starting point for me. It’s where I began the portion of my life that involved love. It’s where I began asking questions. There was this fantasy world so unlike mine, about a real, tangible power in love. Frankly, it made me believe that real love exists. Where was this in my reality? How could I pull this portion of my fantasy into my world?
Even though I CAN tell the difference between my fantasy and reality, they still feel just as real to me. It is very easy for me to get lost in them. I forget where the borders are. I must constantly remind myself where I am in this world and where I am in one of mine.
To be sure, Sailor Moon was an escape, at least at first. It’s where I ran to avoid the abuse, neglect, and negativity from my mother and the suicidal loneliness I felt. Tied to this, everything I do, and linked to my various realties is my art. I have an obsessive drive to create. I must. It my main way of bringing my fantasies into this world. Sailor Moon was a revival; a secondary inspiration and excuse to create and learn. I began drawing anime and manga – branching out and learning all I could of this Japanese culture. As I had before, when I was a lonely boy and delved into American comics to escape, to learn to read and draw and create, to connect myself to the fantasy realities, the myriad alternate perspectives; I tapped into Sailor Moon and anime as inspiration.
I learned to read and imagine with Marvel Comics. I learned to love and think and feel with Sailor Moon. She is a canon to me; my New Testament. Those of the traditional religious (Christian) sort often scoff at me when I said that art was my religion. They do not understand how at the core of my being the act of creation is. I worship and obsess over it. It is a religion to me; one that I constantly rewrite, redefine the rules, the practices, and the goals. Perhaps that is why the religious sort don’t believe me: they cannot accept that you can worship anything that does not have a constant to latch onto. I do not. I was never allowed one. So, I made my own and never stopped making them.
My tenants change constantly. I have my old, original Gods, but their divine lineage is so spread out, so complex and interrelated, that a clear picture will never be possible. My reality is indistinguishably, inseparably, and irreparably interwoven with all my fantasy universes (some created by others, some by me). All are stitched haphazardly together. It is from this source, this well-spring, that I draw my will to create; to live. Marvel comics may have been the genesis of my mind, but Sailor Moon is my heart.