Wednesday, November 18, 2015

The Big Three Oh




I’ll be doing a blog post all about the wedding (that happened) and the move (also happened) soon enough. 


I thought I’d start with this.


See, I turned thirty on November 17th


My dad likes to say, “You can’t trust anyone over thirty, or people who work for the government.” 


I’m both.   
He’s kidding, but I started to think about how different thirty is now than it was in the 60s.  


Mostly, I just don’t feel like an adult yet.  I don’t think that has much to do with my age though.


I like that I can still enjoy what I’ve always enjoyed. 

Gaze upon my Bat-Belts!  This isn't even half of them.  





I wear these to work.  No one cares!  Or notices. 

I like that I can play.

I’m proud that I HAVE come as far as I have, regardless of trauma from all directions for so long.


That being said, I still have a long way to go.  I’m aware of that.  


I know there are things I still don’t like about myself, and those awful things are going to be the hardest to overcome. 


I’m happy with my body now, and my confidence is so much better than ever before.

I’ve learned to stand up for myself, though I still struggle with that from time to time…

I’m eating better and better every day, while still being careful about my allergies. 

I can BE careful without it ruling my life, even when I'm scared.  


…and that’s just really cool.


Still though, there are so many times where my imagination takes over and goes from “being creative” to a true sign of the mental illness I’ve faced for so many years.  


The dark, mirrors…  I’m actually terrified of a lot of things to an incredibly embarrassing degree.  

I’m thirty now, and I still take the whole Bloody Mary thing too seriously.  It’s another level of sad.

Now it’s a matter of not wanting to see the endless darkness that may or may not reflect something that I just can’t perceive when the lights are out…


I already told you about the time as a kid where I left a bathroom like the little chicken I am during the era of Spice Girls and pogs.  


(As a side note, we were doing a dance thing in a PE class once, and I was elected to be Scary Spice as I was the darkest one with curly hair.  That’s how bleached white our fucking middle school was.  Fuck.  Sure.  “Close enough.”  …  These days, I would take it all as a compliment, though I’m not sure how she would have felt being played by a Slavic Jew.  Really, I wanted to be Posh anyway.)


Seriously though.   
Under the bed was scary enough that I just put my bed straight onto the floor to avoid having an under-the-bed at all.   
The closet…  Ugh.  Especially when the door was just slightly open?  

All the way open or all the way closed.  That’s what it had to be.

My sister solved this problem for me by simply tearing the doors off of my closet in a fit of unbridled and seemingly entirely random rage.


Doors slightly open at all, ever…  For whatever reason, my brain immediately goes to, “Yeah, but what’s looking in?”  
Why is there ANYTHING looking in?  What??


Walking to the bathroom at night encompasses all of these things in some way or another, especially that first mirror-in-the-dark bit. 

This was all before the food thing became… a thing.

The worms and ants almost-phobia may have to do with the hidden nature of them, just as the dark poses for everything else.  


And yet again…

Ants though…  They’re like the Borg. 

And worms like maggots, eat the dead.


Realizing I’m very much alive, am I just afraid I’ll find out the hard way?  I’m more afraid of my own reflection in the dark than seeing someone other than myself…  Maybe it’s all existential.  


Fear and phobias are interesting things when they start to rule your life.


I was always super anxious about everything, but I very rarely expressed this openly.  I felt like a had to keep myself with a steely expression for my family, so that no one would know that I was scared or in any pain.  


That may have been a fear too.  I didn’t want to be a burden, and I didn’t want them to feel bad.  


So… I just pretended I was fine for as long as I could.


This led to weirdly humiliating moments, because it translated as being shy when I wouldn’t just speak up and say, “This is really shitty.”  


Good example? 

That time I had a mat in my hair. 


Why my parents didn’t just take a fucking scissors to my hair is beyond me.  It was in the back and under all my other hair.  No one would have noticed.



The whole thing was kind of my own fault anyway because I didn’t want anyone to touch my head.  
I was little then…  Elementary school I guess?   
And my head was an unruly mess of curls and tangles.   
Dad would (jokingly?) chant, “Rip tear!  Rip tear!” as he tried to brush my hair.   



I have since learned to either start from the bottom 
or just cut it all off.



So there we were at the hair stylist. 

The lady gathered everyone around to see. 

So, there I was, SURROUNDED by random people staring at my head.

“IT’S A PERFECT DRED!” she kept saying.  



I did not do this on purpose.  I mean, good to know, but having all those people stare and touch me, and have to sit there in silence pretending I wasn’t scared and embarrassed…  


Ugh. 


You know what?  I’m exhausted enough, let’s stick to the hair for a minute. 


Lemme tell you ‘bout my hair. 


I found my first single grey hair in middle school.   
Since this was the era of being called “Witch Girl” and being made fun of anyway, I decided to be how I wanted to be.  

Fuck ‘em.


I’d rather be poked at for things I choose than the things I have no control over.  


Cue my Rogue-style blonde chunk right in the front of my head.  




This was then blue for a while, various shades of “strawberry”, and green for a very short while.   

It’s hard to keep green without it becoming a variety of snots.

Eventually, I dyed the underside of my hair red, so when it was up in a half-ponytail you could see it… 

I very rarely did that though.



Finally, there was the black and red stripes. 

“Make it look like it’s bleeding.” 



When that proved too hard to maintain, straight red or maroon happened.


There were some mishaps, such as the orange frizz…  

And some disappointments.  
 “We have… semi demi purple?  It’ll wash out in a day or two.”  


I have since stopped dying my hair due to a combination of fear, lack of funds, lack of time, and straight up laziness. 


I have a few more grey hairs now though. 


You know.


Cause I’m thirty.