Your mind is like a parachute, It doesn't work if it's not open.

We can complain because rose bushes have thorns, or rejoice because thorns have roses. You decide.

The worst battles we have to fight are between what we know and what we feel.

Sometimes the most important lessons, are the ones we end up learning the hard way.


Sunday, February 10, 2013

Me

Author's Note: This is the longer version of the 'This is Me' post I had, so if you would like to read the shorter one it was my last post! Other than that, hope you enjoy!


When you fall down, do you always get back up? When everyone is telling you to start over, can you? When you don't know which direction is which anymore, does it really matter?

If your world is falling down around you, and you just don't know what to do, does it matter what anyone else thinks?

I have been trying.

Everyone thinks you can just change overnight. But, I have to find out where it started. What really made me who I am, and how I can change it. It's been a long last couple of months, even years. Going through everything I have gone through isn't even explainable. Maybe that's why I stopped talking about it, because there wasn't anything left to say. But, there is a lot left to say. Maybe I stopped because I was sick of being asked so many screwed up questions, or maybe I just didn't know what to say anymore. Everyone, when they find out about me, asks all of the same questions. Like, it's recorded and on a continuous cycle, and I can't find the off button. They always ask, “Where did this all start? Why are you doing these things? Why won't you talk to us about it?” But, the thing is, I know all of the answers, I just don't want to talk about it anymore because I decided that I would when I was ready, and I wasn’t ready yet. I think it’s time to be ready though; I’m hiding from it which isn’t healthy either, so I guess…I’m ready. 

Every day, she asks me the same question. My therapist that is. Every afternoon she says, "Are you ready to talk about it today?" Every day, it's always the same answer, “no”. Then she goes into some big ordeal about why I should and whatever else she says. I tune her out most of the time just because I have heard it so many times. Then when she realizes that I am either staring at the floor, out the window, or at my hands, completely not listening to her she decides to ask me another question. Usually regarding where it started, or something along those lines. I have never answered before, because where it started I never thought I knew the answer to, but, I think I truly do now...

I was two, or was it three? It was three, I’m pretty sure. Either way I was really little. I was sitting in the middle of the living room floor playing with my baby dolls, and the phone rang. It wasn't out of the usual, I was so used to someone calling that I barely noticed my mom stagger into the living room to answer it. When I turned around to try and figure out who she was talking to, I saw her face go completely blank. She hung the phone up and walked out of the house, leaving me alone…

 For what felt like hours, but was only minutes. Till my dad came home from a call from my mom. I don't remember exactly what he said. But I do remember him coming into the house saying "Hey Hans! Want to go for a ride?" My dad and I were and still are best friends, I loved going anywhere with him. I shot up off the floor and ran outside. A few minutes later my dad came out with two suitcases, being three I really didn't think anything of it. I just climbed up into his Chevy S10 and put my arms up so that he could put my booster seat lock down from above my head. From there I fell asleep in the car, and we showed up at my grandma's house, my mom’s mom. I was really excited especially because she lives really far away. My dad and I stayed there for a few days, because my uncle had just passed away earlier that morning. It was my moms’ brother. Where my mom was I didn't know, and still don’t. 

That's the day it started, the first day that my mom would never be the same again. She drank and smoked when I was even littler than that, but it was going to get worse...fast. 

The next two questions about why I won't talk about it, and why I do these "things." Are going to need a little bit more explaining. After the day it started, the day my uncle died. A few days later my dad’s brother was diagnosed with cancer. After just losing one uncle from cancer, and then having another one diagnosed a few days later was very hard on my entire family. Especially my dad, it was his brother, and he was what my dad used to say "to young." Which I understood. Everything kind of stayed normal after that from what I remember. My uncle got his cancer removed, and was doing better. Then when I was six my grandpa John died. My dad’s mom got remarried after her husband died (my dad's dad), and I never met him. So, my grandpa John was the closest thing I had. I wouldn't say we were close, because my dad didn't really like him, and when I was that young my dad knew everything, and everything he said was right. So, I just kind of went with it. Two years after that my mom's dad passed away. It was the worst day of my life, and forever will be. 

I stood in the middle of the kitchen in my uncle's house. He just got home from the hospital, and my dad's cell phone rang. It was my mom. She was yelling over something, we still aren’t quite sure what it was, and we really don't want to know. But, from the parts we could hear, she said. "I...not going to be....home....for a few days...dad's dead...going to Tex....don't....me." We pieced it together to become "I am not going to be coming home for a few days, my dad's dead and I am going to Texas, don't call me." Two weeks later I came home from school and the police were in my driveway, talking to my dad. My mom was in the back of the squad car. The cop was talking about finding her in her car passed out, on the side of the road in Madison. How she got there, we are not sure. But when they let her out of the car and left her with us she went straight to the bar, didn't come home for three days...I looked at my dad and asked him "What's wrong with mom? Is this our life now?" He didn't know what to say, so he just nodded his head and walked away. 

The next few years were all going to be the same. She would come home from work and I would get yelled at, and then she would leave and go to the bar and may or may not come home. We didn't know, and frankly I started to not really care about her anymore. My dad told me a few weeks ago that one day when I was nine or ten I came up to him and said, "If mom ends up in jail, can we not go get her out, and just let her stay there?" He told me later that he cried himself to sleep that night knowing that I really just didn't care about her anymore. I looked at him and pretty much flat out told him I didn't. She didn't want me in her life, why should I want her in mine. I tried making her a part of my life already, all it did was make my life worse. Her drinking quickly increased to the point where I couldn't have a conversation with her that she would remember the next day, after ten in the morning. I truthfully thought she was going to drink herself to death. I still do.

Now that I have told you my entire life story. I can finally explain the rest with it making sense. I ended up at Roger's 3 months ago, and went back a few days ago. Two years, three months, and 20 days ago, my uncle passed away from cancer. Yes, the one who was diagnosed a few days after my other uncle passed away. I stopped talking, I refused to go to school, I was so depressed I could barely say three words to someone before I got really angry and started slamming doors and yelling. I was diagnosed with an anxiety disorder in November and went into Roger's for the first time in January. I get anxiety attacks, and sometimes I will pinch and scratch myself till I bleed just so that I know that I am still alive. My therapist, everyday asks me "Why do you do these things?" I can honestly say I do not know. I know I feel like my world is crumbling, and the person I want out of my life most keeps coming back. I was put back into Roger's a few days ago, by choice. I felt like it was in my best interest to go back. So, I did. 

It was a different experience. But, it was one I needed. A couple days after I came home I was texting one of my really close friends about it. I told her that it was weird the first time, but it wasn’t as bad the second. She actually said she was proud of me. Which is something I needed, because at this point in time I don’t know who I am, I barely know where I am. I feel like rolling into a ball on the floor and just giving up. But, I know if I give up I will be the kind who, “Couldn’t hold it together.” Or, the kid who, “Just didn’t know how many people actually care.” The thing is, everyone says that, everyone says that about kids like me. But, the thing is, that we know how many people believe in us. But, no one wants to show their support for the “problem” kid. You don’t understand us, until you have lived through what we have…and trust me, and everyone else like me, you don’t want to live through any of the things we have.

Everyone thinks, I'm that happy kid. The one who always has a smile on her face, and is laughing at something. But, it's not the case. I am a happy kid on the outside, so that no one can see that I am crumbling on the inside. I didn't ever talk about it, because I felt like so many people have it so much worse, that I don't have the right to complain.

But, I have an alcoholic parent, and I am one of those kids who have it “worse.” The kids whose parents wouldn’t buy them a $100 pair of shoes for their birthday, think that they can complain about how much their parents “hate them.” I haven’t gotten a birthday present from my mom since I was three…get over it. I don't show emotion, because I don't want anyone to see me as “weak.” But, if I was weak I wouldn't still be here.

But, it's time for me to "start over", and I finally know what that means. I need to breathe, and take a step in the right direction, not the right direction for anyone else, but the right direction for me. Which is toward the light at the end of this dark tunnel I have been stuck in since I was three. I have hidden in the shadows of this tunnel I dug myself into for way to long. It’s time to see the world again. I will still be me, the kid with no filter, and the kid who will stick up for herself, and everyone else, no matter circumstance nor person…

That is who I am. This is who I am. I am me.
If you have a problem with that, I never asked you to be part of my life anyway.

This is my first step towards the end of this tunnel, and as afraid as I am, I will not run anymore.

It's time to be me...finally.

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