Sunday, July 16, 2017

Graduation, Tattoo, Car Crash, Ring, Bow & Arrows, and Being Touch-Starved

It's been a long time since I've posted on here, so I'll give the highlights from the last two months.

So I graduated from high school on May 23rd. The ceremony was fairly boring; the choir sang a beautiful song; Mr. Sullivan chugged a can of La Croix right before we walked out; the robes were hot and pretty itchy. But it's done.

Then my college freakout took a turn for the more severe. I wasn't doing well. I started doubting whether I could handle college; whether or not I'd have a breakdown halfway through the first semester and have to leave, wasting a lot of money.
I was questioning whether I should take a year/semester off, or take some classes at the local community college, or do volunteer work instead... I was freaking out.

Then I went to Tulsa for the first week in June to give some help to my aunt who is getting treatment for rectal cancer. (She's doing great, just more tired and in some pain).
I sorted and started clearing out her hellscape of a basement, took care of her 17 year old cat, and went to stuff like an all-female cast of Richard III with her and her boyfriend.
While I was there, I also got a tattoo of my left eye on my ankle, as recognition of the cataract I was born with.
After telling my aunt about my doubts about college, she planned a lunch party with five ladies who are friends of hers, ranging in age from 30 - 80. They all approached me either on their own or in a pair to talk to me about college and depression and personal drive. (I cried a little).
Then later, at the dining table, they all went around and gave me advice and shared personal stories and struggles they've had. It was extremely touching. (I cried then too).

I started working at the Southern Pine Company. I make minimum wage and do literally anything that's needed.
I sometimes answer phones, design possible furniture for manufacture, go through several dozen CDs full of photos (looking for relevant things for clients to see), sorting through pictures (including all the severely corroded ones) and scanning the good ones into the computer, planning some larger projects, and researching and writing letters to potential clients.
Among other things.

I also started TMS therapy for treatment-resistant major depression. I go every weekday for six weeks.

I went to the Embark Orientation for UNCA at the end of June. It actually went alright; I met some really nice people, found out that there's a large population of LGBT people, and got my schedule, which has classes I actually look forward to. Of course, the dorms we stayed in were incredibly uncomfortable (very loud, squeaky beds, etc) and it felt like a lot of the people were determined to be more politically correct than the next person, like everyone was trying to out-liberal each other. But I felt better about it.

On the way back from Asheville, I was driving while we were on the interstate, when I lost control of the car; it spun out and crashed into a pole on the median. It was weird; just before, the music suddenly got very loud, right before I lost control. It was like watching a movie of someone on a roller coaster.
I was in shock for a while; I started having a panic attack on the side of the highway while my dad made some calls. I had to call Bambi to talk to me in order to calm me down.
Then the state trooper showed up to make the report; he decided that no one was at fault, before he had to leave to chase down a truck whose back wheel had caught fire and was spewing smoke without the driver noticing.
I was really in shock for a while. My dad and I went to Shoney's; I lost any filter and started saying any thought I had, including my depression and the last time I self-harmed, among other things. Around midnight, I really stopped making sense, and started saying disconnected sentences as they half-formed in my mind.
The car is drivable, but has been declared totaled. It'll be collected this Monday. Dad got a nice used pickup truck, but I have a lot of weird feelings about it all.
Everything feels so out of control.

I was walking through this more suburban neighborhood with my friend, and I saw a tiny edge of something shiny buried in the dirt. I dug it up, and it turned out to be a U.S. Naval Academy ring from the class of 1965.
It was gold with an aquamarine gemstone and a name engraved on the inside. I couldn’t find any notices about lost class rings with any of those characteristics, so I posted a ‘found’ notice on the Savannah craigslist page. 
A few days later, I got an email from the USNA Administration, letting me know that they had notified the likely owner and he should be contacting me soon. Sure enough, I almost immediately got an email from the person whose name was inscribed on the inside, telling me about little details on the ring and his phone number. 
We set up a place and time, (the parking lot of a local seafood restaurant), and were able to meet each other.
His name is Leland and he’s at least 75 years old. The ring was stolen from his home in 1974, just about two streets away from where I found it. He thinks it’s been there the entire time. 
We talked for about an hour and a half about tons of stuff; what was stolen from his house, his time in the Navy, the trial and error of choosing his career, his kids and grandkids, book recommendations, places he’d lived, and a lot more; I found out that my homeroom teacher that I’d had for four years is one of his next door neighbors. 
He was almost in tears when I gave the ring to him; it was incredibly touching. I guess it was just a moment of serendipity. 

I just got back from New Mexico. We got in Thursday night and stayed until late the next Monday. We were there for my parents 25th wedding anniversary for them to renew renew vows. 
We stayed at friend’s houses in Albuquerque and Santa Fe for two nights, and at an Air BnB for two nights.
The ceremony was fairly short, only about 30 minutes. Twenty of so of their old friends attended. I read a short speech that I’d written. (the chaplain said it was the first time she’d heard someone say the word ‘asshole’ in a wedding ceremony in a church).
Afterwards, everyone went to our Air BnB for the after party. There was a LOT of champagne drunk by everyone. I made the playlist of music, and it was a big hit. A few people came up to me to tell me that they hadn’t heard the song playing in decades, and got a bit emotional. 
(I also got decently drunk, but my genes that give me a predisposition for alcoholism made it so I just get rather dizzy and uncoordinated rather than lowered inhibition).

While we were in Albuquerque, I went to an archery shop. for my 18th birthday/graduation gift, I found a beautiful recurve bow that fits me perfectly, with an excellent draw weight and length. It's 62 inches unstrung, with a 20 pound minimum draw weight. (stringing it is the hardest part, since its the most you'll ever physically bend it back; it has to pulled from bending forwards and straight to bending back with a pretty good curve. It's a lot of force). 
I got everything I needed; the bow, six arrows, an arm guard, a finger guard, and a stringer. It all got shipped to my house last week. I also later bought a quiver and a decently large target.
I'm excited.

I also got to go to the House of Eternal Return exhibit at the Meow Wolf museum in Santa Fe. It was INCREDIBLE. It was all inside the building, which is an old bowling alley, so it doesn’t seem very big.
You walk through the doors past the entrance desk, and somehow you’re in front of the porch of an old Victorian house at twilight. 
You walk inside, and you’re in a normal old-fashioned house with a normal kitchen and bedrooms and a living room and bathroom and everything. But there’s subtle clues about an odd circumstance found everywhere; in the mailbox, the code to the safe in the datebook on the coffee table; photographs on the walls; letters left pinned in closets. 
But then you realize that if you duck through the fireplace or climb into the refrigerator or into the washing machine, you will end up in a surreal dream world. 
There's an enormous tree, a huge yeti that moves, a futuristic teleportation depot, where you select which world you want to go to, and a different door will open and lead you somewhere different. There's an odd chinatown, a kitchen that's painted to look like the inside of an old cartoon, a room that makes you feel like you're in an aquarium, a cave with a giant dinosaur skeleton upon which you can play music on the ribs, an entire working antique arcade, a room with tiny houses on the cliffs on the walls, creepy half-broken animatronic hands that you can control, a room where every wall and ceiling are mirrors, lit only by tiny lights that look like stars, and an actual space capsule. 
It was amazing.

It's been roughly three and a half months since I've had any REAL physical human contact. All I've had is quick, uncomfortable hugs with people older than me and handshakes.
I'm a tactile person. It's an important thing to me. Without contact, especially for a long time, everything feels separated and lonely and like my skin doesn't fit right.
Apparently the clinical term is 'touch-starved.'
It wasn't until this weekend, when I went to Bambi's house and explained things to her. She immediately agreed to hold me and run her fingers through my hair while I cried. 
Words can't describe how much I needed that. She's such an amazing person and I love her so much.

So there you go.

Sunday, May 28, 2017

Senior Trip + My Eyebrow

Last Friday, we left for our senior class trip to Orlando.

A long bus ride later, we were at Daytona Beach. Later that night, we spent some time at downtown Disney, (where no one bought anything because it was so insanely expensive).

The next day we went to a water park, (where my friend with Strep throat had to be taken to the first aid building.) I also got to have a conversation with my homeroom teacher in his bathing suit, when I'd only ever seen him in a suit and tie and talked to him maybe four times in four years. It was surreal.

That night was Grad Bash, where Universal Studios is open only to High School seniors from 7 pm to 2 am. I was fantastic. We met some stereotypical kids from rural Alabama, rode tons of roller coasters, hung out in Harry Potter World,
As it got late, I started getting too tired. I convinced my friend Alishe to slap me across the face, hard, to wake myself up. We heard a horrified "Ooooooh" from the people walking past. At least it worked for a while.

When it was approaching 2 am, I began falling asleep every time we sat down for a moment. One of my friends, a guy who's over six feet tall, gave me a piggyback ride to the meeting place while I slept, I woke up just long enough to hear someone ask, "Is that a boy or a girl that he's carrying?" For some reason, I found this absolutely hilarious.

~

About a week after I got back from the senior trip, I took a razor blade and sliced a cut above my eyebrow.
I just couldn't get the thought of it out of my mind. I finally did it because I found a little butterfly bandage. It seemed like a reason to do it.
No idea why. It just made me feel...interesting. Like people noticed me. I felt awake for a little while. It healed in about five days, and I forgot pretty quickly.



Wednesday, May 3, 2017

The Sensory Deprivation Tank

Today, I spent an hour in a sensory deprivation tank.

I was prepared to get in, completely naked but for the defiant look I was wearing on my face.

Climbing in was incredibly intimidating, because you're stepping into nothing. A dark void. And then you close the door and you realize that you're already floating without even noticing, because the water is so salty. You can't sink. So you lie back and relax into the warm water like you would a bed.

I could have easily fallen asleep in minutes. But I didn't let myself; I wanted to experience nothingness.

I found that I was most comfortable with my arms bent at the elbow so that each hand was parallel to each shoulder. It was how I felt best. However, this didn't give me much room on either side. If I moved, I'd end up slowly floating off center, and my finger occasionally brushed the wall. But I didn't let this break the state I was in.

I could hear my heartbeat, feel the minuscule movement in the water. The ceiling seemed to expand to a great distance.
As my eyes relaxed, I could see ribbons of color snaking across the ceiling, almost imperceptible from the darkness. Sometimes there'd be a pinpoint of light, which would glimmer for a moment before fading away. Sometimes there'd be a little burst of blue lights, widening and narrowing in a circle.
As time went on, the blackness above me seemed to change to a blue, somehow even darker than black. I'd see columns of black move slowly through the blue.
Once, I saw the silhouette of a hand right above my face.
The color of the darkness momentarily shifted to orange, still darker than black, before going back to blue.

At the same time, I was listening. The room was totally soundproofed and I had earplugs in, but I could hear things. My heartbeat. Food digesting. Every twitch of my muscles. And every few seconds, a low rumble, like someone pulling a wooden chair along the ground on the other side of the house.
The rumble would last for a few seconds, sometimes longer. A few times, as the rumble stopped, I'd hear a low voice murmuring for just a moment.

To let you know that your time was up, they'd play music. Softly at first, slowly going louder, allowing you to become aware of it through the water and earplugs.
I was quite confused for a moment, distantly wondering if that was my signal to get out or if I was imagining the music.
As soon as I became aware, the vast ceiling seemed to violently collapse down until it was almost touching me.

I slowly got up and cracked open the door. It was bright. Moving felt wrong. Having weight felt wrong. I clambered out and into the shower in my room.

Once I rinsed all the salt off, I got dressed and went back to the lounge area. The lady who'd explained everything to me before I went in gave me a cup of tea. We chatted and pet her dog until my dad came to pick me up.

~

Prom was on April 8th. I went with my friend Russell after several dates didn't work out.
It was alright, prom itself was almost identical to last year, but with slightly better music. Although they did actually have two slow dances.

We left and stopped by Waffle House before going to the beach and hanging out. We found college students filming the ocean under red lights and some people smoking weed in a life guard tower. We left around midnight, only to discover that no where is open. So we sat in the Target parking lot, clicking the 'surprise me' button on wikihow articles.

It went alright.



Saturday, April 8, 2017

I'm Doing Better....?

Well, for that week or so before my 18th birthday, things got bad. Very bad. It was the worst I can remember ever getting.
I almost checked myself into the hospital.

And then it was my birthday.
I took my dad to work so I could have his car for the day.
I went to the beach and reread The Book Thief for a while. Then I went home and sat on the porch for a few more hours, still reading.
Then I drove out and got my dad and Alex from downtown. Alex and I got lunch and went makeup shopping, as I am completely incompetent with makeup. We hung out at home for a while, then I took them back.
My parents took me out to a nice restaurant and gave me an album of pictures from my whole childhood, which was nice. Afterwards, we went to a gas station and I bought a lottery ticket. (Didn't win anything, but it was still fun).
My parents got me a large squid plushie, a kanken backpack, and a BUNCH of great antique photographs, mostly from the early 1900s. The best one was a silver exposure portrait from around the late 1800s.

I wouldn't say that I'm better. Not by long shot. But I don't think I'll do that anytime soon.

Friday, March 24, 2017

I don't know what to do

There is no room for me at The Mountain this summer.
I was too late. Or they didn't want me.
The two people there who are most important to me both got chosen to be counselors. Not surprising. But I won't be there.
Funny how some of the CIT's caught with drugs last year are getting to be counselors this year.

I could have applied to be a garden intern. But the pay is sooooo little. It's basically volunteering. I need to make money this summer. Somehow.

This will be the first time in seven years that I haven't spent the summer there. I won't be able to be at my Home, where I feel like I belong.

It's what kept me going all year.

~

Someone came to visit. A surprise.We had dinner. They stayed for maybe two hours. What they said, when they left, I don't know.
I had a really hard time.

~

We went to New York over spring break. It was fine, I guess.
I got to hang out with my awesome cousin and her boyfriend. Got pretty buzzed with them.
I got to walk around on my own, just looking at stuff and getting mildly lost. It was nice.
We went to A LOT of art galleries and museums. I liked The Mett the best, seeing all the old Egyptian and Greek and Medieval stuff.
We got to see Cirque du Soleil.
Mom and I went to the giant Macy's. Got a bunch of stuff on sale. A new purse. New jeans. New shoes.
And... a prom dress. I didn't even know if I wanted to go. Especially now that I didn't have a date. And my second date can't make it. And my third date bailed for someone else. It looks like I am. Maybe with another person, maybe not. We'll see.

Thing is, while I was trying on my favorite dress, I had a breakdown in the changing room. I'm not so skinny anymore. I've always been The Skinny Person. Now I needed a size 5. I realized I had stretch marks on my hips. I realized that I have a good deal of acne on my back, not to mention my face. The dress is mostly backless.

It didn't help things.

~

I'm about to turn 18.
It's funny.
For as long as I can remember, I've always just assumed that I wouldn't make it to 18 years old. I knew I'd die before then, somehow. If not in some accident, then I'd just kill myself. It was simple; it was a fact. I didn't want to be an adult. I still don't. I'm not ready.
And now it looks like I will turn 18. Otherwise, it's getting down to the wire. Not much time left to decide.
I don't think I would. But I've just been having a really hard time. With that. With my future. With everything.
I realized after that Halloween party where literally two people came that I don't have many friends. I have plenty of acquaintances, but very few friends.
It seems like I'm drifting away from everyone.
Of course, everyone will go on about how they'll always be there to talk. Always be there when you need them. But they're not.

I'm alone.

Sunday, February 19, 2017

Secrets, Colleges, and Pizza Hell

First of all, I finally completed my counselor application for The Mountain. I was quite late, but my parents wanted me to have no contact with them until they made up their mind about whether or not I'm allowed to go.
And then I realized that it'll be a long time before they agree, if ever.
So I filled out and submitted my application at 11:30 at night last Thursday.
But I'm also quite nervous if I am hired as a counselor: I don't like kids that much. Sure, there are certainly some that I love a lot and bond closely with. But as a large group, there will be a lot that I don't like that much. In a cabin of 6-8 kids, there'll always be one or two that are just angry, spoiled, or uncooperative little things. It's just very tiring being around kids for an extended period of time. That's not to say that I'd be unfriendly. I'd do my best to understand them, to bond with them, to get them to open up.
I just don't know if I can handle being around young kids nearly 24/7, for six weeks.
I just need to be there. I can't remember a time when I haven't spent the summer at The Mountain. It's the one place that I feel most at home. It's what I look forward to each year, something that keeps me going.
I'd get paid a minimum of $145 dollars a week, which is about what I make at Basil's in two weeks.
I could have been a kitchen worker or garden worker instead. But I can't handle working in another stressful kitchen for a while, after Basil's. And the garden job would be an unpaid internship; and since the garden manager left this year, no one seems to know if there even will be a garden program this summer.
So counselor it is.

~

Second, I got my acceptance letter to UNC Asheville. I think I might go to UNCA for at least my core classes, as it's smaller and cheaper. Then I might see about transferring to UNC Chapel Hill to focus on a major of English and writing.
Of course, this is in no way a solid plan. It's just a thought.

~

Third, as of today, I started 60 mg of Ritalin. I've been more anxious; like that feeling when you're sure that there's something important you're forgetting to do. But today, I felt awake.

~

Finally, the pizza hell: Basil's Pizza and Deli.
Wow. Where do I begin.
It's stressful. Any job is stressful. But this is on a while other level.
I've had more anxiety there than I have in literal years.
Days on afternoons generally aren't bad, and lunch on Saturdays... but I usually end up having to work on Friday and Saturday nights, and on busy holidays. Making specialty salads with 8+ ingredients each and serving soups, (for here and to-go orders), preparing pita bread, and frantically preparing extra ingredients that we've run out of, and doing tasks for other people around the kitchen is a lot to do.
On busy nights, orders will be coming in nonstop. I'll be fifteen orders behind, salads in different stages of readiness, the servers getting frustrated and impatient for their food.
Then, there's the manager. She seems to really dislike me. Whatever I'm doing, I'm doing it wrong. I'm never moving fast enough. She'll be yelling from across the kitchen, asking where different orders are; orders that either are time-consuming and labor intensive, or that have ingredients that take a long time to go through the oven. She's made me cry before, but I don't think she saw.
This is a job that easily needs two people on the busier nights. But that rarely happens.
And then I have to clean up. Which isn't unreasonable, but there's so much cleaning to do, while still making salads; it isn't unusual to be scheduled to get off at 8:30, but actually get off closer to 9:00 or 9:15.
Most people are nice there, generally understanding. If you're backed up, they'll try to help you out. But they can only help out for a few minutes, and then I'm alone again.
On Valentine's Day evening, I was freaking out. I was the only salad person there, and a super busy dinner rush was about to start. I told my kind supervisor that I was extremely anxious. He pulled me aside and said, 'Look, do you want an early Valentine's Day present?' And handed me a pipe full of weed. I was seriously considering it, but the manager walked by, and I ran out of time. As predicted, it was busy.
Last Friday, it was packed. So backed up. Manger yelling. No one to help me out. Complicated and time-consuming orders. If feels like it's been an eternity. I'm thinking, 'all right. it has to be at least 7:30. I can get through the last hour.' And I glance at the time, and it isn't even 6:20. And I think, 'Oh my god. I can't do this.' I feel vomit coming up my throat. I ran to the bathroom. I wasn't sick, but I did start crying.
I walked outside and told the manager that I had thrown up. She let me go home. My dad picked me up, still crying. I called out sick the next day too, a day that was promising to be a busy Saturday night. I just couldn't do it.
I'll go back this week. I'm working Monday night, Friday night, and Saturday afternoon. It's only Friday that I'm worried about. We'll see.