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Safety
I've been plagued by nightmares all my life; so much so that most of them don't scare me anymore, they just stress me out, until I hit a point and I realize that "I don't have to put up with this shit," and I wake myself up. But when I was little, I had no clue how to do that. Back then, the monsters and events that haunted my dreams were outright terrifying. I would wake up, scared to go back to sleep, because if I did, I would plunge back into that darkness.
So I would take my bear blankie and traipse down the hall to your room, checking to see if your had gone to bed yet, because in your bed, with you there, I was safe from the dreams. If you weren't there, I would go back to my room, back to my bed, hoping the dreams wouldn't come back.
This process would repeat several times until either one of three outcomes happened: you had gone to bed, and I would crawl in with you; I'd give up on waiting for you, and would crawl into your bed anyways; or the dreams would stop for the moment, and I was able to sleep through the rest of the night.
As I got older, this lessened. Probable reason one: the appropriateness of sleeping with you in your bed was less. Probable reason two: I became more accustomed to the dreams. Probable reason three: somehow, the safety I felt with you, in your bed, started to disappear. I'm not sure where it went, because although the fear diminished, it did not fully go away. Hell, even now, I still have a slight irrational fear of the "monster" beneath my bed. Even when there's hardly any room under my bed because of all the crap down there. Even when my bed was directly on the floor, there was still that whisper in my mind telling me to look out for the witch that wanted to grab me if I so much as put a toe over the edge of the mattress. After I outgrew my childhood, I can recall one, and only one, time, where I slept with you in your bed, and it wasn't out of fear, or a need for a feeling of safety.
It was the night before we took him to rehab in Pennsylvania, and I had been up late with you, helped you pack a suitcase for him, and e-mailed my CGS teachers that I wouldn't be in class the next day. When we finally went to bed, I got no protest from you about crawling into the same bed. I think it was because I wanted to feel like I wasn't alone, and didn't want you to be alone. It was like I was reversing the safety role, like you would be safe if I was there with you.
I wish I knew the exact moment you were no longer my safe space. I would go back to that moment in a heartbeat and do whatever it took to prevent that change. I want to know when the switch was flipped from good to bad. I could hypothesize all day about the timing of it, but I don't think I would get an answer.
As much as I want it to be, I don't think it was one singular moment; I think it was a series of moments, built up, like a brick wall, one by one, until we could no longer see each other. Once that wall went up, I longed for what might be on the other side; but much like Schrodinger's cat, it may or may not exist, and the only way to find out would be to see what's on the other side.
I want to have a relationship with you, but I don't know if it's possible. All the hurt that can't be undone, can't be taken back, is like the mortar between the bricks. You try to say all the right things, but it'll take a wrecking ball to bring down that wall, and there's a lot of damage that will have to be assessed.
Even if we knock down the wall, I don't think the feeling of safety will ever come back; like a light bulb that has burned out. You can flip the switch all you want, but that bulb will never shine again. In order to light up the room, you'll have to change the bulb, and I'm not sure how many emotionally scarred and damaged individuals it takes to change one. Even if we manage to get that far, who's to say that the fuse itself hasn't blown.
So we sit here, in the dark, on opposite sides of a wall, trying to figure out how to connect with each other, if we even want to. Sometimes it's easier to let sleeping dogs lie than it is to try to wake them without getting bitten.
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Hoodies
I sent you your hoodie back today. It was a simple act: put the box together, put the hoodie in the box, write the address, hand it to the clerk, pay, and walk out the door. But walking out that door felt like I was walking out on you, on us.
Youâve broken my heart three times, but as long as I had that hoodie, it was like there was a part of me that still clung to a distant hope of renewing our relationship. I didnât want to let you go; I wanted to cling to the remaining dregs of what our relationship was before everything went to shit; before responsibilities came in, when we were more carefree, when our biggest concern was what our grades were. But those times were long gone, well before we exchanged hoodies, like we were exchanging rings.Â
Even after we separated, when you broke my heart for the second time, and I couldnât cope, I held on to the hoodie, thinking this was just a break, like a âgoodnightâ instead of a âgoodbye.â I still slept with that hoodie, as if it would bring you to be there in the morning. But it never did.
When you moved on, without telling me, knowing I was still waiting for you, you broke my heart for the third and final time. I finally let go of your hoodie. I washed it to remove any trace of me, and put it aside. Even then, it took me several months to pick it up just to send it back. It was like picking up that hoodie was the heaviest thing in the world. When I finally let go of the idea of us, when I was finally able to move on, was when I gained the strength to pick it up.
Sending your hoodie back was like putting the last piece in the middle of the puzzle, then taking it apart and putting it back in the box. Even though it took so long to make it, it was taken apart and put away, barely even admiring it. Then that box was shoved into the dark recesses of the top shelf of a closet, most likely left alone until the closet was for some reason emptied.
Even though that hoodie was just a simple piece of clothing, symbolically, it was so much more. It was the love that was lost; respect that had been earned that was now gone; hope diminished.
It was just a hoodie that I put in that box, but it felt like it may as well have been an engagement ring. When I sent your hoodie back to you it was like I was wiping my hands clean, and finally walking away from the grave of our relationship, trying to leave my grief behind as well.Â
Part of me hopes you reach out in the future, and part of me knows it will never work out. Youâve broken my heart three times, and thatâs two times too many. I want to wish you a good life, but Iâm afraid of what will come out of my mouth if I try to speak. So instead, I sent your hoodie back, and simply asked for mine in return.
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Hauntings
I donât know how to tell you about the things that haunt me, the things my heart finds too heavy to carry around from day to day. Iâm afraid that if I pick these things up to share them with you that theyâll be too heavy for you too, and weâll both suffocate under the weight. So instead I leave them dotted around the floor like my own personal minefield, an obstacle course that I have to traverse day in and day out, hoping to not trigger one. I donât know how to go through the minefield with you behind me because I donât want to lose you to it.
I donât know how to do this with you. Iâve never had someone who cares so deeply about me, someone who puts so much effort into wanting to understand me. I donât know how to let you support me, how to give myself over to you. I donât know how to do this not on my own.Â
But I donât know how to do this without you. When youâre not actively in my life I feel lost, like Iâm searching for something, but I donât know what that something is. My heart cries in your absence, like a puppy whining for the warmth of its mother just after being separated. I donât want to do this without you next to me. I donât want to do this without your hand in mine, but Iâm still figuring out how to reach out for you.
I imagine in the dead of night when I roll around the empty space in my bed itâs my heart trying to find yours; itâs my heart trying to find our true connection. I want to have you by my side for the rest of my life, but Iâm still learning how to lean on other people when it matters the most. I know I push you away, even though I donât want to. I would rather walk with you hand in hand, but with no flak jackets to protect us from the land mines, I regretfully leave you behind at the edge of the minefield, leaving you to watch me traverse it on my own, and hopefully survive, instead of letting you figure it out with me.Â
I want to let you in to everything, but Iâm still trying to find the key to the gates.
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Proof
To the politicians, and the bigots; to the transphobic, and the close-minded individuals; to anyone who thinks that being trans is wrong, or that we are sick, or need to be saved or converted; to anyone who wants proof that being allowed to transition, and being loved, and accepted, and supported is what the trans community needs, here is your proof.
I am living, incontrovertible proof. Proof that it is better to be true to who you are, than to live a life hidden, afraid, and ashamed. My siblings in my community, my family by choice, are all proof that it is better to be loved and accepted, out of the fucking closet, than to be shamed, hated, and forced to change or conform to outdated societal norms.
Before I realized who I really am, and started to find my true self, I was miserable. I was on a path of complete self-destruction, trying to force myself into a mold that was presented to me by society at birth. At first, I padded the mold, tried to make it more comfortable for my body. But that didnât work. So then I tried to just live with the uncomfortableness, figuring that at some point, I would grow into the mold or the mold would conform to me. But that still didnât work. The mold stayed the same, never changed. So I tried to change, but in the wrong ways. I tried to get rid of the things that stick out the mold, but ended up cutting in the wrong places. I tried to desire what the mold portrayed, but I found myself hating it. I desired the opposite, longed for things to be flat and stick out in opposite places. I tried to climb upwards, but ended up digging myself into the ground the longer I tried to fit into that mold.
Soon, I gave up, figured that I was doomed to live in a mold that didnât fit, that I would have to live the rest of my life miserable , uncomfortable, and longing for something out of reach.
Eventually, I figured it out. My problem wasnât that I didnât fit the mold. My problem was that I was given the wrong mold to begin with. I cast aside my birth-given mold, and finally laid hands on the one I had secretly been yearning for since I was consciously aware of myself and societyâs perception of me.
As I moved through my transition, my life started to turn around. It was by no means perfect or easy, but it was getting better. I was happier, started to feel more at home in my body, and started to truly love myself. No longer was I miserable every day. My downward spiral started moving in the other direction, and I started living, instead of surviving.
That, in short, is my story. One of the countless stories out there just like it, and just as many that are vastly different. Collectively, our stories, and lives, provide living, breathing proof that what is best for us is to allow us to transition, to accept us as we are, to support us in whatever possible way.
We are not dangerous, we are not creeps or pervs. When we go into a bathroom, all we want is to get in, take care of business, and get out without having to interact with anyone, and praying that no one picks us out, and starts harassing us. We are not broken, damaged, or sick. We do not need to be healed, saved, or converted.
If you donât care about living proof, then look to the dead: three known trans murders in the 1980s, four in the 90s, two in 2000, one in 2001, one in 2002, three in 2003, one in 2004, one in 2006, one in 2007, two in 2008, three in 2010, three in 2011, sixteen in 2012, twelve in 2013, twenty-one in 2014, twenty-seven in 2015, fifty in 2016, fifty-eight in 2017, thirty-nine in 2018, thirty-one in 2019, twenty-eight in 2020, fifty-three on 2021, fifty-one in 2022, thirty-one in 2023, and twenty-eight so far in 2024; Lelah Alcorn, Taylor Alesana, Blake Brockington, Ash Haffner, Cameron Langrell, Zander Mahaffey, Mike Penner, Kyler Prescott, Melanie Rose, Nex Benedict, Daphne Dorman, Nova Dunn, and countless more trans suicides, which have a much higher rate than that of the general population. All of this in the US alone;I don't want to imagine it on a global scale. Remember their names. Their real names, not the ones they pretended to be from birth, but who they really were. May their names and faces haunt you the way you haunt our safety and right to exist, because it is because of people like you that people like me are dead and dying, whether from suicide or because theyâre murdered for being who they truly are.
How many more of us have to die for you to realize that thereâs nothing wrong with us? How many, until you realize that the root of the problem is you?
You want proof? Well, here it is, alive, and dead.
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How My Mother Raised Me, or Rather, How My Mother Deferred the Raising of Me to My Siblings
My mother was an omnipresent force in my childhood. She instilled many of my dramatic traits, and taught me many things, but she did not raise me. My oldest sister was more of a mom to me than my mother was. My older sister helped cultivate my love of music and interest in sports. My brother helped me push myself forward on the path of nerdiness and geekdom.
 My mother taught me about conditional love, gave me a fear of upsetting authority, instilled in me a harmful need to present perfection automatically to everyone around, and gave me an understanding of someone elseâs presence based on convenience rather than desire.
 I was just shy of six years old when my dad left, and although I didnât entirely understand itâs complexity at the time, I learned about true loss and wanting. My oldest sister, already being pushed into parental-like responsibilities, had the full weight of them thrust upon her. She became the main adult in our lives before she was even legally an adult. She took me to most of my baseball games and practices, and picked me up from daycare most of the time. She taught me manners and life principles, and looked out for me. She did all of this while also doing the same for my two other siblings, and while going to school, both high school and college. She did all of this, but she shouldnât have had to.
 When my oldest sister wasnât around to be the parent, my older sister stepped up to the plate, often watching me and my brother after school. She fostered my interest in music by playing the keyboard with me and playing music on the computer and encouraging me to sing along. We went to volleyball camp together, she would take me to the pool, taught me how to roller blade, and would play sports-related games outside with me. She would make sure my homework was done before letting me watch TV, and would read my favorite books to me, voices and all. She gave me encouragement and helpful criticism when I started drawing in high school. She ended up taking on parenting responsibilities that she shouldnât have had to.
 My brother and I would watch cartoons together on weekend mornings, and he tried to heighten my interest in games that he liked to play, including Yu-Gi-Oh, Pokemon, Axis and Allies, several computer games, and many more. When we got older and started fighting less, we hung out more. Once he had his license and I had a learnerâs permit, he taught me how to drive more than anyone else. We often discussed various math topics and different strategies for the games he liked to play. I was probably one of the first people he told that he thought he was gay. My brother managed to escape with having to be the least parent-like to me, but he didnât get away unscathed.
 At various points in my life I was closest to one of my siblings over the others, but no matter what happened, I was never close to my mother, and later on, my step-father. They pushed and pushed for my confidence, but in all the wrong ways, and only ended up pushing me further and further away. They are correct in thinking that they had an impact on my development into an adult, but they are wrong on how.
 Whenever I would do something that was rude or out of line in my motherâs eyes, she would sometimes pull out the line, âI didnât raise you to act like that,â and she was partially correct, because she didnât raise me. My siblings did, because she wouldnât.
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The Choice
They say it is a choice; a choice to be gay, lesbian, bisexual, pansexual, asexual, transgender, genderfluid, agender, nonbinary. They say it is our choice to be queer.
 My community says we were born this way. It has been scientifically proven that it is in our psychology and physiology, that we have been biologically coded for this since the time we were in the womb.
 I say it is both. Yes, I was born this way. Yes, this is who I was supposed to be.
 But I couldnât be this way if I didnât choose to. I could have continued to be miserable, self-loathing, self-doubting, lost. I could have continued down my spiral until I was six feet underground, refusing to even acknowledge who I was meant to be.
 But I didnât.
 I made a choice, THE choice.
 I chose to not only acknowledge, but accept, my biology. I chose to explore my physiology, to learn the psychology of me.
 I chose to start climbing back up my spiral, past who I was in search of who I could be. I chose to keep climbing, to find new heights that I couldnât see before.
 I made my choice.
 I chose to be who I am meant to be.
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Requiem At Last
I walk through her door and sit down in a chair next to her desk. âWhat can I do for you today?â she asks me, her voice soft, caring, empathetic and concerned, as if she already knows. My hand moves to my pocket, as if it had a mind of its own. I start to finger the cool, heavy, rough metal in my pocket, wanting to grip it and use it, while at the same time wanting to chuck it as far away from myself as possible. âCâmon, Jack, youâve got to talk to me. I canât help you if you donât.â
âPlease just kill me now,â I whisper in a low mumble.
âIâm sorry, I didnât quite catch that.â
âPlease just kill me now,â I whisper again, this time more clearly.
âWhy?â she inquires, matter-of-factly.
âBecause if you donât, then I will.â I grasp the rough grip in my pocket, my index finger falling to place on the trigger. This action, however, causes a clear outline through the pocket of my jeans, and I know that Mrs. Sosa sees it, but I donât care. I doubt she could wrest it from me before I could use it.
âWhatâs in your pocket?â she asks, although it sounds more like a command. I hesitate. Thereâs a couple of different ways I could go about this. I could stay silent, make things as difficult as they could possibly be. I could tell her straight-out. Either way chaos is about to ensue. When a suicidal student comes in completely ready to die, controlled chaos always ensues. âWhatâs in your pocket?â she repeats, the command tone present. She must be mistaking my hesitancy for a refusal to speak.
âTake a wild guess,â I mutter darkly, uncomfortable telling her directly what it is.
âI think I know, but I want you to tell me.â
âI-I canât,â I stutter out, shaking my head.
âThen just tell me yes or no-is it a gun?â
I hesitate a moment, then nod my head, tears welling in my eyes. âI need to hear you,â she commands gently, meaning she saw my head nod.
âYes,â I choke out, tears now streaming down my face.
âOkay. Iâd really like to talk to you about why you felt the need to bring a gun into school, but first I need to make sure youâre safe, and while youâre in possession of that gun, you, and everyone around you, are unsafe. Are you aware we always have a police officer in the building?â I nod my head yes, too consumed to be able to speak. âAre you okay with me calling him in here?â I shake my head no. I donât want anybody else involved. âWell, unfortunately then, I have to bring him in. Heâs the only one qualified to take the gun from you.â I continue shaking my head no. âAlright, youâre not going to be very happy with me, but I have to call him.â She reaches for her phone, keeping her eyes on me until she has to dial.
In that split second I pull the gun from my pocket, cock it, and put it to my temple. She looks back at me as she finishes dialing, and the look that crosses her face is a mix of fear, panic, and concern. âOfficer Krupp? This is Bridget Sosa, from the guidance office. I need you in my office immediately. This is an emergency.â
âIâll do it. I swear to god Iâll do it!â I cry out quietly, but still loud enough to be picked up by the phone. She puts the phone on the desk and immediately starts trying to talk me into putting the gun down.
âJack, listen to me, please. You donât have to do this.â
âYes I do!â I cry through clenched teeth, my finger tense on the trigger.
âWell, you donât have to do it right now. You can do it later. You can wait for a little bit before you do it,â she almost pleads.
âIâve waited for long enough, put up with this for long enough. I have to do it nowâŠâ I trail off.
âTell me why you have to do it now, why this canât wait until later,â she commands pleadingly.
âYou wouldnât get it, you wouldnât understandâŠâ
âThen help me to understand. I want to understand.â Thereâs a soft urgent knock on the door, and my tense finger almost pulls the trigger as I startle. Mrs. Sosa looks past me to the window in her door, and what crosses her face could almost be a look of relief. She beckons for the person to come in as she replaces the phone receiver back on the phone, and the door quietly opens and closes beside me.
âHey son, Iâm Officer Krupp, but you can call me Kyle,â he introduces as he leans against the wall across from me. âWhat can I call you?â
âHow about the worldâs worst screw-up?â I retort, not really joking.
âYouâre not a screw-up,â Mrs. Sosa interjects quietly, but is gently cut off by Officer Krupp:
âOkay, whatâs your name, son?â
âJack. Jack Cavanaugh.â
âOkay, Jack, Iâm going to be up front and honest with you-Iâm here to get that gun from you, and I will do it in whatever manner I have to. The easiest way is if you give me the gun, but I get a feeling that you donât want to do that.â
My response is just a dead stare, almost a dare for him to try and take the gun away from me, to try to take away what will finally free me. Kyle must read the message on my face, because he picks up almost right where Mrs. Sosa left off.
âIn order for me to help you out, Jack, I need to know what youâve come to get help for.â
âWho said I came for help?â I practically snarl, renewed tears trailing down my face.
âWell, I would say you did,â Kyle responds quietly, âseeing as you came down her voluntarily.â
âMaybe I just wanted a witness.â
âI think we both know that thatâs not one-hundred percent true.â I glare at him. I donât want him to be right, but I know he is. If there wasnât even the smallest part of me that wants help then I wouldnât be here. I would have pulled that trigger long ago. Itâs just that the part that wants help isnât the dominant part.
I feel my arm start to relax and my grip slacken as I think about this. Kyle takes a step towards me and immediately I tighten my grip. Kyle sees this as well, and retreats.
âAlright, Jack, we need to come to some sort of agreement. If I stay against the wall, will you put the gun down so we can talk?â
With tears streaming down my face I shake my head. âI have to do this,â I choke out amongst the tears. My finger tightens again on the trigger, but I just canât bring myself to pull it.
âWhy do you have to do this? We want to understand, to help you, but we canât if you donât tell us,â Mrs. Sosa explains.
âI-I canât. I donât know what to say, what to tell you.â
âWhy donât we ask basic questions and you just tell us the answers,â suggests Kyle.
âI have a hard time answering questionsâŠâ I respond, trailing off.
âWhyâs that?â Mrs. Sosa this time.
âI-I-I canât-it-itâs hard to explain-â
âWeâve got as much time as you need,â encourages Mrs. Sosa.
âI-it-I-if I can write, maybe I can explain that way.â Immediately Mrs. Sosa pulls a pen and a medium sized pad of paper from one of her desk drawers. I eagerly take the pen and paper from her, grateful that Iâm ambidextrous, so that I can continue holding the gun in my right hand and write with my left. As soon as I put the pen to paper the explanation pours out of me:
Iâm terrible at saying things out loud. Even things that I want to say. Itâs like there is this force inside my head that keeps me from saying anything, no matter how hard I fight it. Responses to questions circle continuously through my mind, but I canât say it. Itâs like a civil war breaks out in my mind between âsay itâ and âdonât,â and âdonâtâ always wins. People tell me to fight it, but I canât, like as soon as the battle starts Iâm paralyzed.
I stop writing and decide that thatâs enough for now. I can write more later if I need to. I proffer the pad to Mrs. Sosa, and when she asks if she may read it aloud I give a curt nod.
After she finishes reading thereâs a brief silence. Officer Krupp, or Kyle, rather, quietly breaks the silence: âIf we let you write, can you answer questions, explain things to us, help us understand?â I hesitate for a moment, and then nod my head yes. Mrs. Sosa hands the pad of paper back to me, and I resituate it on my lap so I can write with my left hand.
âSo why do you want to kill yourself?â Mrs. Sosa asks, although Kyle looks like he was about to ask the same question. I write nothing, but give Mrs. Sosa a look that says âreally?â instead. âOkay, really broad question. What pushed you to want to do it now?â
I canât wait any longer. Iâve waited too long, put this off longer than I shouldâve. I shouldâve done this ages agoâŠ
âWhy do you say that?â asks Mrs. Sosa, after reading my response.
I kept putting it off, hoping that things will get better, but they donât, and they never will. I see that now, which is why I have to do this now. The words, the hate, the stress, it never goes away. None of it ever does, never will. The only way to get rid of it is to get rid of me. So Iâm getting rid of me. Everyone else will be happier without me around anyways.
Thereâs a slight intake of breath from each of them after they read it, and then the pad makes its way back to me. I readjust my grip on the gun, making it tighter, firmer. As my fingers move Kyle and Mrs. Sosa both tense up, and this time I almost do pull the trigger, as I see their eyes locked on my fingers.
âHow do you know it will never go away?â Mrs. Sosa prods.
âBECAUSE IT WONâT!â I burst out. âIt never has, and because history just repeats itself, whatâs happened before is doomed to happen again! Itâs an endless cycle of torture and torment, and the only way for me to end that is to end me, so thatâs what Iâm doing!â
âHistory is only doomed to be repeated if circumstances donât change,â whispers Kyle, interjecting his thoughts.
âTHEN IâM CHANGING THE FUCKING CIRCUMSTANCES!! With me gone, the past will have nothing to revolve around, to repeat for, and therefore it will finally stop.â I try to pull the trigger, but I still canât bring myself to put a bullet through my head. I pull the gun down from my head, knowing that I wonât be able to pull the trigger, no matter how much I want to. As I uncock the gun there is a collective sigh from both Kyle and Mrs. Sosa. I proffer the gun to Kyle by the muzzle, and as soon as he takes it I curl up in a ball, the pen and pad of paper falling to the floor.
âJackâŠâ they both murmur, almost simultaneously. I donât move, donât respond, but they both seem determined to say what they want to say.
âThank you, Jack. You made the right choice.â Kyleâs words.
âYes, Jack, you made the right choice,â echoes Mrs. Sosa. âIâd really like to talk with you about this, Jack. I feel like thereâs a lot more you can share with me.â
I hear them talking, but I donât really listen to what theyâre saying. Instead, Iâm thinking of whatâs in my other pocket, and how to get away to use it.
âI need to go to the bathroom,â I quietly announce as I raise my head from my knees. A look passes between Kyle and Mrs. Sosa, and then Kyle says heâll take me. âI donât need an escort. I know how to get there,â I retort, almost offended.
âItâs not a matter of knowing how to get there, itâs a matter of knowing youâre safe,â Mrs. Sosa explains, and Kyle nods his head in agreement.
âFine,â I grumble, and slowly unfold myself from the chair. I traipse out of the office, Kyle following close behind. He does afford me some privacy by waiting outside the bathroom at least. I traipse to the last stall, lock the door, and then sit down in the corner. I donât actually have to go to the bathroom; I just wanted to get out of Mrs. Sosaâs office and to get some privacy.
I reach into my pocket that wasnât holding the gun and pull out a small, plastic container. Carefully opening it, I remove the other piece of metal that Iâve been carrying with me. I slowly roll up the sleeves of my sweat-jacket, contemplating what pattern Iâm going to draw this time. I settle on nothing in particular, just slow and deep. Something that may finally bring the end I seek.
I look for the vein in my left forearm, and, once I can see it clearly, I start to trace it slowly with the razor blade, using enough pressure to cut deeply, hopefully hitting close to the vein. As soon as I reach my elbow I hear Kyleâs voice calling out through the bathroom, followed by the sound of his footsteps as he enters the bathroom, looking for me. I say nothing, knowing heâll find me anyways.
âIs everything okay?â he asks. âYouâve been in here for a while and I havenât heard anything.â After a moment I see his head peering into the stall from over the door through my blurred vision. âShit!â he mutters. His face disappears, and the lock starts to jiggle, but he canât seem to unlock it from the outside. âJack, can you unlock the door, please?â he asks, although it sounds more like a command.
âHow about no?â I respond slowly, my words starting to slur. As my head drops to my chest, I feel too tired to hold it up anymore, I see that I have a pretty good sized pool of blood near my left leg, and the blood is steadily flowing from my left arm, which is resting on my left leg.
The lock jiggles again, and then falls silent. Thereâs a strange noise, almost like clattering, and I manage to lift my head to see Kyle crawling under the stall door. The noise is everything on his belt making contact with either the floor on the bottom of the door. I donât see whether Kyle makes it all the way through or not. My head drops back to my chest and my vision slowly fades to black before I get a chance to.
 Someoneâs slowly shaking my shoulder, and thereâs something squeezing my left arm. I open my eyes slowly, and though my vision is blurred, I can make out Kyle crouched in front of me, holding something on my left arm, which explains the pressure I feel, and his other hand stretched towards me, which is probably the one on my shoulder. I see his lips moving, and I hear sound coming out of his mouth, but I canât process what heâs saying. As I stare at him, however, what heâs saying starts making sense:
â-you with me, jack? Can you hear me?â As I make sense of his questions I slowly nod my head, answering them. I hear a sigh of relief from Kyle before he asks me another question, âCan you hold this on your arm?â As he asks, he motions to a wad of toilet paper that heâs pressing to my arm.
âWhy would I do that?â I slur back at him, still not one-hundred percent functional in my brain.
âBecause we need to get the bleeding under control, or else you will lose consciousness again, and possibly bleed to death. I need to get help, but I need you to hold this to your arm so I can do that.â
âBut that would be the opposite of what I want to do,â I respond slowly to his explanation, almost sneering at him.
âYou donât give up, do you?â he asks rhetorically. He stays silent after that for a moment, concentrating on my arm. Then, just as I start to slip back into the fringes of unconsciousness, âI hate to do this, but I have to. Jack, I would really like you to push down on your arm with this, but I canât make you. Iâm going to go get help. I canât stop this by myself. You need medical attention. Whereâs the blade you use?â I say nothing, make no motion to give it to him, either. âDAMN IT JACK!!! Just give me the blade! At this point, cutting yourself any more isnât going to make a difference. If this one-â he motions to my left arm â-doesnât stop bleeding then you will die. Please just give me the blade so I can have a tiny bit of peace of mind while I get some help.â His last sentence is pleading more than commanding. I open my right hand and let him take the razor blade from my palm.
He attempts to take my right hand and use it to take the place of his hand on my arm, but I refuse to hold my hand there. I would rather bleed to death than live this life any more. He leaves quickly without another word, and quickly I am submerged into blackness once again.
 When I awake this time it feels different. Thereâs a constant pressure on the whole of my left forearm, and whatever it is Iâm lying on is swaying slightly. And Kyleâs not crouched in front of me. Thatâs one of the big things I notice first. Thereâs a guy sitting on either side of me, and in front of me are a set of doors. I also feel something weird in my right arm, and when I look I see that a small tube has been taped to my arm, and itâs attached to a bag of fluid. Then I hear the wailing sirens above me and connect the dots to form the picture: Iâm in an ambulance.
âGoddamn it,â I mutter, more to myself than anyone else, and the guy on my right takes notice that Iâm conscious again.
      âHey, youâre awake. My nameâs Mike, Iâm a paramedic. Youâre in my ambulance, on the way to the hospital. Howâre you feeling?â
âLike I want to dieâŠâ I groan back, still completely serious about my desire.
âYeah?â I nod my head. âWell, itâs our job to make sure that doesnât happen, at least not while youâre under our care.â
âGreeeaaatttâŠâ I mumble, trying, unsuccessfully, to keep it under my breath. Mike gives me a short chuckle, and then asks if he can ask me some questions. âSure,â I respond slowly, nonchalantly.
âAlright, first I need to confirm your name and get your date of birth. Can you tell me your name?
âJack Cavanaugh.â
âOkay, and now can you tell me your date of birth?â
âJuly thirty-first, nineteen-ninety-eight.â
âDo you know your social security number?â
âNot off the top of my head, no.â
âOkay, no worries, buddy. Whatâs your address?â
âEleven thirty-five thirty-second street, northwest, Connorsville, West Virginia, 53957.â
âMoving on to the medical questions, do you have any allergies?â
âNone that I know of.â
âAre you on any medications?â
âNo.â
âCan you tell me how the injury happened to your arm?â
âDid they not tell you when they called?â
âThey did, but I want to hear your side of it.â
âFine,â I respond tersely. âI took a razor blade and cut myself.â
âThat deep with just a razor blade?â He sounds slightly taken aback, as if he hasnât encountered this type of situation before.
âYouâd be surprised where determination can get you, especially when you have no desire to stick aroundâŠâ
âMoving on,â he interjects, âwhy did you cut yourself? Were you trying to kill yourself?â
âLetâs see, I had just come from my guidance counselorâs office, where I was pointing a gun at my own fucking head, and I almost pulled the god damn trigger. Then you guys come to pick me up because Iâm bleeding to death from a self-inflicted wound in my left arm. What do you think?â
âI would say that yes, you were. Is that correct?â
âNo shit, Sherlock,â I retort.
âAlrighty, then. Do you have any previous psychiatric history?â
âWhat do you mean?â I ask, feigning confusion.
âHave you ever done, or tried to do anything like this in the past? Have you ever been diagnosed with any mental illness?â
âIâve never been diagnosed with anything,â I mention, purposely trying to avoid answering his first question.
âWhat about the cutting? Is this a new behavior?â
I pause for a moment, contemplating how much to reveal. âNo,â I finally state. âItâs been going on for about five years.â I expand, after a moment.
âAnd the suicidal thoughts? Are those recent, or have they been going on for a while?â
âItâs been going on for a whileâŠâ
âAs long as the cutting?â
âNo, only a couple of years.â
âOkay. Was there anything in particular that happened recently to make you try to do it today?â
âI just got tired. Iâm tired of waiting for things to get better, Iâm tired of putting it off, I got tired of trying to build up the nerve to do it. So, I decided that today was the day.â
He busies himself entering the information into a computer, and start rechecking my vitals. By the time heâs finished with that weâre stopping, and the driver of the ambulance is getting out. Mike has me sign something on his computer, and then the doors in front of me open, and Iâm wheeled into the hospital. After they figure out what room Iâm in, they have me move from the stretcher to a hospital bed. A nurse follows us in, and starts entering my information into another computer as she receives a report from Mike. After the EMTs and the first nurse leave, a second nurse enters the room and has me change into a hospital gown. About this time my parents show up, although I really donât want to see them.
âOh, Jack!â my mom cries out as she rushes over to the bed and tries to put her arms around me. I fend her off of me, and my father starts:
âJack-â but I cut him off.
âDad, I donât need you reprimanding me.â
âJack, please, just listen to me. I donât want to reprimand you. I just want to know why. Why son? Why did you do it?â
As I stare at him I notice tears start leaking from his eyes. My father, the man who never cries in public, is crying over this. I have finally managed to do something that has brought out some form of emotion in my father.
âWhy did I do this?â I croak back, fighting back tears of my own. âWhy did I try to end the misery that is my life? Take a wild guessâŠâ
âJack, please. Donât be like this. Just tell us what went wrong,â my father responds, half protesting, half pleading.
âWhat went wrong? Everything went wrong,â I retort, my voice starting to raise. âEverything screwed up, and I became the worldâs biggest fuck up. I was so fucked up that I became nothing. Everything was so screwed up that it all became meaningless. Nothing means anything anymore. Iâve gone on far too long as nothing. Itâs tie to end the nothingness.â
âOh, JackâŠâ my mother sobs.
âJack,â my father sighs, âwhy didnât you say something before now?â
âLike you would have listened? Like you would have cared?â I throw back at him, my voice getting even louder as a feeling of rage overcomes me. âThe only time youâve ever paid any mind to me was when I did something wrong, when I screwed up, and even then, you were only ever disappointed. You never tried to help, you never tried to fix anything!â Iâm shouting now, and even though Iâm sitting in a bed, Iâve pushed my mother away from me. As I stare at my father and his shocked expression, the raging fury within me quells to a silent rage. âI gave up thinking you cared about me years ago,â I say in a low whisper that nevertheless carries across the room. My fatherâs shocked expression slides off his face and is replaced with a familiar one: disappointment. My motherâs expression however is one of dismay.
âIâve always cared Jack-â
âThatâs a load of bull!!!â I shout at my father as he tries to protest. âIf you cared you would have been there! You would have noticed when this started five years ago!â
My fatherâs expression slowly changes to match my motherâs as what Iâm saying sinks in. Before my father can say something else in protest, however, a doctor walks into the room. âIs everything okay?â He asks as he pushes a wheeled surgical tray in front of him.
âEverythingâs fine,â I respond slowly, glaring at my father, as if daring him to say otherwise. As he walks to the side of my bed, the doctor looks from me to my parents and then back to me.
âAlright then. Iâm Doctor Jim Johansson. I know what your chart says, but I want to hear from you why youâre here before I get started.â
âI have a big-ass cut on my arm,â I retort back in typical teenage fashion, proffering my gauze-wrapped left forearm.
âOkay, how did you get a big-ass cut on your arm?â I look away from Dr. Johansson and down at my feet, the frenzy of response starting in my brain and the paralysis that comes with it starting to set in.
âI did it,â I force out in a barely audible mumble.
âIâm sorry, did you say you did this?â I nod my head, the feeling of being unable to talk overtaking me. âWhy did you do it?â he asks, sounding truly curious instead of like he was just trying to gather information, like he really cares. At first I donât say anything, I canât. But after Dr. Johansson prompts me, I respond:
âI want to die,â I say deadpan, staring him straight in the face as tears start trailing down my face again.
âWell, that is a reasonâŠâ he trails off, seeming slightly taken aback by my blunt response. Dr. Johansson pulls a wheeled stool over to the side of my bed and then uncovers the surgical tray, revealing a couple of pre-threaded suturing needles, a pair of scissors, and a syringe full of something. As he sits down on the stool, he picks up the syringe. âIâm going to inject a local anesthetic into your arm. Then Iâm going to stitch the wound in your arm closed. Think you can handle that?â
I nod my head, and then he carefully unwraps the gauze from around my arm, taking care not to disturb the packing over the actual wound itself. He carefully sticks the needle into my arm near the cut, injecting the anesthetic.
After a few minutes, he gently palpates my arm around the packing. âCan you feel that?â
âNope.â
âAlrighty, then. Time to start stitchinâ.â He flashes a smile at me with his last comment, but I donât smile back. I canât. My head is in complete chaos. I try not to think about the pair of scissors on the surgical tray next to me, easily within reach. As Dr. Johansson starts to gingerly remove the packing from the laceration on my left arm, I turn to the right, closing my eyes. Closing my eyes doesnât help, though. If anything, it makes the chaos worse. Images flash before my eyes even more clearly with a black backdrop.
âI havenât even started yet. You okay, bud?â Dr. Johansson asks me.
âYeah, Iâm doing just fine,â I lie through my teeth.
âThe sight of the wound getting to you?â
âNot, not that. JustâŠâ
âThe sight of the thread being pulled through your skin freak you out a little bit?â I hesitate. The idea of watching my wound being stitched up actually sounds kind of cool.
âNo, itâs not that,â I finally respond, turning to face Dr. Johansson. âItâs nothing, really.â I lock eyes with Dr. Johansson during this last statement, half hoping to convince him that, sans the gaping cut on my left arm, Iâm okay, and half hoping that he sees through my mirage.
âOkay,â is all Dr. Johansson says, but the knowing look that flashes across his face towards me says that he knows itâs not nothing, but heâs not going to push the issue right now. He starts the tedious task of stitching closed the three inch gash in my arm.
After he finished sewing my arm and sets the last needle on the tray, he recovers the tray with the blue, paper-like material that was initially covering the tray, and bandages my arm over the stitches. âNow, based on the report from the EMTs, and based on my initial assessments, I would like for you to have a mental health evaluation.â I almost scream no. My parents both look stricken.
âIs that truly necessary?â my father intones, phrasing it as a question, but sounding patronizing more than curious.
âYes,â Dr. Johansson responds confidently and assuredly. âBased on the nature of Jackâs wound, and a report to the EMTs from Officer Krupp that, prior to the infliction of this wound, Jack was pointing a gun at his own head, threatening to pull the trigger, I believe that a mental health evaluation is needed.â
âCan we discuss this outside, please?â my father asks in a commanding tone.
âUm, yes, we can,â Dr. Johansson responds, slightly startled by the sudden request. I watch my father walk briskly out of the bay, followed by the doctor, and my mother traipsing behind after a nod from me to follow them. Once I hear voices outside the closed curtain, I reach toward the surgical tray, slowly lifting the cover. I slowly grasp the scissors from the tray, almost as if trying to convince myself that I want to do this. I open the scissors, exposing the blades. I think about going after my right arm, but I canât effectively control my left hand to dig the scissors into my right arm. The general anesthetic that was administered earlier is still in effect. I think briefly about my throat. Just cutting straight across. Not necessarily going for any major veins or arteries, just being symbolic more than anything. I decide to put that off until later. I want to actually bleed before I start leaving symbols.
My gaze falls to my thighs. The more I contemplate it, the better it seems. I slowly slide the gown up my right thigh until I see the bottom edge of my boxer-briefs. About half of my thigh is revealed. I gently drag the blade along my thigh, no pressure yet, just caressing, almost as if I were trying to shave my thigh. Then I actually turn the blade into my skin, poised to cut through the flesh. I push the blade into my leg, forcing it to go deep. I start pulling the scissors towards me, slowly lengthening the wound, and, despite trying not to, I give a soft cry of pain. The voices outside the curtain stop. Dr. Johanssonâs head appears around the edge of the curtain.
âShit!â he mutters as he rushes over to the side of my bed. His hand immediately grasps mine, trying to pull it up and away from my thigh. I fight him, trying to keep dragging the scissors towards me. The fight doesnât last very long, though. Dr. Johansson forces my hand up and wrests the scissors from me. After moving to the other side of the bed, he pulls the tray away from my bed and puts the scissors back down on it. He walks over to a cabinet thatâs off to the side, and then comes back to my right side, this time with a roll of gauze in his hand. He starts bandaging my thigh slowly, making sure to get pressure over the fresh wound. After he has a couple of layers of gauze down he picks up the pace a bit. After he finishes wrapping my thigh, he walks to the curtain and summons a nurse over. âI need another suture kit and a set of restraints,â I hear him inform her. He walks over to the computer near my bed, enters something into it, and then asks me a few questions. âDid you do this on purpose?â I look to Dr. Johansson with a face that says âreally, youâre asking me that?â âI have to ask,â he counters, the look on his face almost sympathetic.
âYes,â I finally sigh, giving up on being difficult, finally surrendering to the fact that I will be living today instead of dying.
âWere you trying to kill yourself?â I pause for a moment, thinking. I wasnât necessarily trying to kill myself, but I wouldnât have minded if I had bled out before they came back into the room.
âPotentially,â I finally respond, my response being naturally semi-cryptic.
âCan you elaborate on that?â
âThe primary goal was not death, but if it occurred as a side effect I would not be all hot and bothered.â
âOoookaaayâŠâ Dr. Johansson mutters as he types a few things into the computer. âNow, youâre going to not like what Iâm going to have to do next. Within the next few minutes a nurse is going to come in here with a set of restraints. Because of what you did, I now have to restrain you, for your safety as well as ours. Sheâs also bringing me a suture kit so that I can stitch up the wound in your thigh. You did a pretty good number there. Iâm probably going to want to take an actual look at the wound before I stitch it up, make sure thereâs no serious damage. What I would like to know now is whether youâre going to let me put the restraints on you nice and easy or am I going to have to call a couple of extra guys to help me put them on?â
âWell, as fun as it sounds to be forcibly restrained, I think Iâm going to have to go the non-resistance route. I donât feel much like fighting, and even if I did, Iâm not in much of a position to do so.â Â Â Â Â Â Â âSo youâre going to let me put them on you nice and easy?â
âSuuuuuuuurrreeeeeâŠâ
âThatâs not very reassuring.â
âAgain, not in much of a position to fight,â I iterate, starting to feel fed up with the situation.
âJack, just give him a yes or a no,â my father interjects. I glare at him. I want my parents as least involved as possible.
âYou say youâre not in a position to fight,â Dr. Johansson comments, âbut you resisted pretty well when I took the scissors from you. It would be nice to know ahead of time if youâre going to take a swing at me or something when Iâm trying to put the restraints on you.â
âI donât take a swing at somebody unless they really piss me off and punching them is deemed necessary,â I respond slowly. I notice that Iâm starting to feel tired and sluggish. Despite the fact that it seems like all I do is sleep, I always feel tired. I also notice that my right hand, which has been resting on my thigh near the fresh wound, feels warm and wet. I glance down and see that the bandages on my thigh are bright red, apparently saturated with blood. Dr. Johansson notices me look down and follows my gaze.
âThatâs not good,â he remarks as he walks briskly from the computer back over to my right side. Just then a nurse enters the bay, a handful of straps draped over one arm and pushing a tray almost identical to the one Dr. Johansson entered with earlier. âGood timing,â Dr. Johansson comments to the nurse as she proceeds towards him. âI need that suture kit over here. Can you start applying the restraints?â The nurse leaves the tray next to Dr. Johansson, who has already put on a pair of gloves and pulled out more gauze, and starts applying the restraints around my limbs and then connecting them to the bed so that my range of movement is terribly limited. I test just how far I can move by pulling against the restraints on my arms. I get about three inches before the straps are taught. Before I can test the straps around my ankles, I feel a sudden, constricting pressure on my thigh. I try to pull away from it as reflex kicks in, but my legs stops short, thanks to the restraints.
âEasy, Jack,â Dr. Johansson reassures me. âIâm just trying to control the bleeding at the moment. The only thing Iâm doing is wrapping gauze and applying pressure.â
âIt hurts,â I comment, feeling childish as I slowly relax the muscles in my leg.
âItâs going to hurt a little bit,â explains Dr. Johansson. âIn order to stop the bleeding I have to apply a pretty significant amount of pressure.â I nod my head in understanding and sit back against the bed. As I feel the tight pressure around my thigh again, I fight the urge to pull away and try to relax my leg instead. I close my eyes as I continue to fight against pulling away.
After a few minutes the intermittent pressure dissipates and is overtaken by a constant squeezing. âIâm going to give that a few minutes and then check on it and hopefully get it stitched up, but in the mean time Iâve got a few things to take care of.â Dr. Johansson strips off his gloves and throws them away as he leaves the room. The silence that follows is so tense that a tightrope walker could walk across it. I can tell that my father is extremely displeased with something, and my mother just seems confused and concerned more than anything.
The tense silence continues until Dr. Johansson returns, pulling on another pair of gloves. âLetâs take another look at your leg, shall we?â I try to raise my knee up to make it easier for him to examine my thigh, but all that ends up happening is my ankle jerking in the restraint. âEasy there,â he comments, sounding reassuring. He sits on the wheeled stool next to my bed and pushes my hospital gown back to fully expose the bandaging. âThe bleeding seems to be at least partially under control. Itâs not bleeding through the bandage, which is good.â He slowly cuts through the gauze from the wound. After he carefully removes the gauze from the wound he pulls the suture kit closer to himself. He gently palpates around the wound, inspecting it, making sure thereâs nothing in there that isnât supposed to be. He swabs my thigh, wound and all, with an antiseptic soaked piece of gauze. I expect it to sting, but it doesnât.
âSame drill as last time,â Dr. Johansson comments to me as he picks up the syringe from the tray. Thereâs a slight pinch as the needle enters my thigh, and a slight burning sensation as the anesthetic is injected. After a few moments, Dr. Johansson gently palpates my thigh again around the wound, but I feel nothing. After confirming this he starts to stitch the wound closed. Once he finishes sewing, he bandages over the stitches, just like he did on my arm. âThat should do it,â he comments. âThere should be someone here shortly to perform a mental health evaluation. Theyâre going to decide if youâre okay to be released or if they want to admit you to the psychiatric ward. If they chose to admit you they may admit you as inpatient or they may admit you as outpatient.â
âWhatâs the difference?â my father quickly interjects.
âWell, inpatient means that Jack will be staying in the hospital, on the ward. If heâs admitted as outpatient, then he would come to the hospital during the day and go home at night.â
âSo itâs a difference in level of care?â my father asks, sounding accusatory.
âKind of,â Dr. Johansson answers. âIf Jack is admitted to inpatient, it means that we believe that he is an immediate threat to himself or someone else. To put it into laymanâs terms a little bit, it basically means that his condition at this time is a little bit more severe. By having him admitted to the ward we know heâs going to a safe place where he canât hurt himself or anyone else.â As Dr. Johansson says this my brain responds with a âchallenge accepted.â
âAnd if heâs admitted to outpatient?â
âWell, it basically means that his condition is less severe; that we donât think he poses an immediate risk to himself or to anyone else. If heâs admitted to outpatient, then we feel that he would be safe to go home, and would come to the hospital during the day, basically to receive treatment. There would be group and individual therapy sessions, much like inpatient. With either type of admission, our highly skilled and trained team of professionals will work with Jack to try to figure out why heâs doing what heâs doing, try to help him find some alternative things to do instead, maybe start him on some medication if itâs felt that itâs necessary, and help set up a long-term care plan for Jack, such as setting up appointments with outside therapists, and psychiatrists if we start him on any medications.â
âAnd there will be one person who determines whether heâs admitted inpatient or outpatient?â Now my father sounds skeptical, as if he doesnât feel like this is a well-working system.
âOne person does do the evaluation, but itâs not solely that person that makes the decision. The evaluator has a set of guidelines to follow during the evaluation, and then they consult with a couple of different people on the final decision, based on the findings from the evaluation.â
âOkay,â my father responds, sounding a little bit more comfortable with that information.
âAny other questions?â Dr. Johansson proffers. My parents shake their heads, and I remain still and silent, not trusting myself to say or do anything lest I give away my thoughts. âOkay. I will check back on you later, most likely after mental health comes down to do their evaluation.â He walks out of the bay, and again the room is overtaken with a tense silence.
âJack,â my father starts, but I cut him off with a motion of my hand.
âI donât want to hear anything you have to say. Everything is just an act now. I know you donât really care about me. You care about what it means for you, how itâs going to reflect on you. You care about what people will think if they find out that you have a son who tried to kill himself, who cuts himself, who is a fuck-up in the eyes of society.â My voice fades away, no longer able to say anything.
âOh, JackâŠâ my mother starts again.
âRowena, please. Let me have a word with Jack. Then you can have your say with him.â My mother nods, agreeing. âJack, Iâm going to say what I have to say, and youâre not going to stop or interrupt me. I canât make you listen, but I hope you will. I have always cared about you, Jack. I know I havenât really showed it, but I have always cared about you, always wanted the best for you. I know Iâve pushed you to be good, because I always wanted you to be the best you could be. Iâve pushed you to do everything you possibly could because I want you to know that youâre capable of anything. I only ever was put down by my father, and had a mother who just went along with him instead of standing up for me. I never knew how much I was capable of because I was only ever put down. I didnât want that to happen to you. I wanted to make sure you know exactly what youâre capable of. Iâm sorry I havenât shown this in a better way. I wish you couldâve brought it up to me beforeâŠbefore it go to thisâŠâ Tears are starting to trail down his cheeks again, and Iâm almost touched by his words and show of emotion, but my anger overrides. Beneath all the anger I know heâs speaking the truth to me, but I donât want to believe him. I canât fully believe him right now.
Before I can formulate a coherent response, thereâs another knock on the door as someone new pokes her head around the door. âAre you Jack?â she asks. I nod my head. âWhatâs your birthday?â After she asks me, she looks down at a clipboard in her hand to confirm my answer.
âJuly thirty-first, nineteen ninety-eight,â I tell her.
She looks up at me with a smile, and introduces herself. âMy name is Emily. Iâm from behavioral health, and Iâm here to do your assessment. Would you mind talking with me for a few minutes?â I shake my head. âGreat.â She looks at my parents in turn. âWould you mind if I talked to Jack alone?â My father looks slightly taken aback, and a questioning look starts to cross his face. My mother, while also looking slightly surprised, nods her head.
âOf course,â she answers Emily softly. She grabs my fatherâs wrist and pulls him out the door behind her, before he gets a chance to start questioning Emily.
Once the door closes behind them, Emily starts to explain, âMost people feel more comfortable answering these questions without other people in the room.â I nod my head in understanding. âI see from your chart that you were brought in after cutting your wrist in your school bathroom, which you did after holding a loaded gun to your head in your guidance counselorâs office. It also says that while Dr. Johansson was outside talking to your parents, you took the pair of scissors from the suture tray and started cutting into your leg. Is all that correct?â I turn my eyes away from her as I nod my head in affirmation. âOkay, Jack. I do need you to talk to me a little bit. I know it might be difficult, but I need you to try to use words. Can you tell me about why you did those things?â
I stare off into the floor in the corner of the room, not exactly sure how to respond yet. A couple of different thoughts race through my mind, each clamoring for attention, to be the one to leave first. My response depends on whether I want to be sarcastic, and an asshole, or genuine, and cooperative.
âJack?â Emily prods after a moment of intense silence. I hold up a finger, asking her to give me a moment, and tap my temple a couple times, to let her know that Iâm thinking about it.
I go back to my debate of how I want to answer her. The anger within me at the situation pushes me towards sarcasm, but thereâs just something about Emily that feels calming, that pushes me towards being genuine. I struggle to find a phrasing that might satisfy both, but come up empty. As much as I want to be genuine, to just let myself break down here and let it all out, I canât. Fear and anger override, closing any gates that may have started to open.
âI would think holding a gun to my head is pretty self-explanatory,â I finally mutter, still staring at the corner of the floor.
I donât see how Emily reacts, but after a moment she responds with, âHolding a gun to your head may be self-explanatory, but not pulling the trigger when you threatened that you would isnât.â So sheâs willing to fight fire with fire, is she? Well, bring it on.
âSo I chickened out on blowing my brains out. So what? I still tried to fucking kill myself by slitting my goddamn wrist.â Iâm trying to hold it together, to keep the anger up front to hold up the bravado, but itâs not working. I can feel the tears starting to fill my eyes no matter how hard I try to blink them away. I glance in Emilyâs direction, trying to gauge her reaction, how sheâs taking what I say.
âJack,â she says softly as she takes a couple steps closer to my bed. âI think you want to talk about this, but youâre letting your anger speak for you right now. Does that sound about right?â I look back at the corner of the floor, unable to meet her gaze. I know sheâs right. I donât want her to be, but I know she is. I nod my head. âMay I sit here?â She motions to one of the chairs next to the bed. Another nod. âLetâs try going back a little bit,â she almost whispers. âHow long have you been feeling suicidal?â
âIâm not really sure,â I reply after a pause.
âIs it something thatâs been going on so long that you lost track of when it started, or is it more like something that came on gradually and has been building up?â
âI guess kinda bothâŠâ I almost mumble.
âSo, like something that came on gradually a while ago, and has built up over a long period of time?â
I nod my head, feeling the tears starting to leak from my eyes as my breath catches in my throat, threatening to break loose in a sob.
âAnd the cutting. Is this a new behavior, or has it been ongoing?â
âItâs been happening on and off for about five years,â I choke out, trying to hold back sobs, already having given up on the tears, which flow freely down my face now. She makes some notes on her clipboard before continuing on with the questions.
âNow, in your chart, Dr. Johansson put the reason for the stunt you pulled with the scissors as âintent to harm self; possible suicide attemptâ. Would this be correct?â
âI-I donât knowâŠI guessâŠâ
âWere you or werenât you trying to kill yourself?â
âI donât know. I just wanted to hurt, to bleedâŠâ
âOkay. Just a few more questions, Jack, then weâll be done. Do you have a psychiatric care provider that you see on a regular basis? Like a psychiatrist or a therapist?â I shake my head no. âSo youâre not on any medications, I take it then?â Another shake of my head. âIf you were to be discharged to go home, would you be safe?â I think about it for a moment, then shrug my shoulders. âIf you went home, would you try to kill yourself again?â
âI-I donât knowâŠâ
âJack, I need you to be completely honest, not just with me, but with yourself, right now.â
âMaybe? I just, I really donât know right now.â I close my eyes and turn my head away from Emily as the tears continue to fall down my face, fighting the sobs that want to rack my body.
âOkay Jack. Last question. Do you have access to any weapons at home, like firearms?â I nod my head. My dad has a gun safe, containing a couple different kinds of guns, and he doesnât know that I know the combination. Hell, thatâs where I got the gun that I tried to use this morning. I wouldnât be surprised though if he still hasnât noticed that I took it. He hardly opens it. Heâll go in there like three or four times a year, and itâs usually just to take them to a shooting range, or clean them. For all the guns he has, he hardly uses them. Heâs more of a collector than anything else.
âAlrightey, Jack. Thank you for talking with me. Iâve got to meet with Dr. Johansson, and then Iâll be back to discuss your options.â I nod my head, letting her know I understand. She opens the door and walks out, and as soon as she leaves, my father immediately steps back in, followed momentarily afterwards by my mom.
âJack, what did she ask you about?â Â My father asks, again in his commanding tone. I donât answer him, tears still streaming down my cheeks. My mom reaches out her hand towards mine. I donât take hers, but I donât pull away either, and she rests hers gently on top of mine.
âYoung man, I asked you a question,â my father pushes. Still, I donât answer him. âJack Brian Cavanaugh, what did she ask you about? What did you tell her?â He doesnât raise his voice at me. Instead, he lowers it, speaks slower. I turn my hand over in my moms, gently gripping hers now.
âGet. Out.â
âWhat did you say to me?â I snort.
âYou donât scare me anymore. You canât do anything to me here.â My momâs hand squeezes mine briefly. I canât tell if sheâs trying to warn me or comfort me.
âWatch your tone, young man.â
âGet. Out.â He gives me an incredulous look, like he canât believe that Iâm disrespecting him like this.
âJack. Brian. Cavanaugh.â
âNo. Youâve had your say. Now get out!â He continues to stare at me in disbelief, as if he canât really be hearing what heâs hearing. He opens his mouth again to say something, but I cut him off. Â âGET THE FUCK OUT!â He looks at me for a few more seconds, then turns around, shaking his head, and storms out.
âJack,â my mother whispers, âwould you like me to leave too?â I shake my head. She leans over towards me to give me a hug, and I bury my face into her shoulder, letting loose everything I had been holding back. Iâm not sure how long we stay like this, but after what feels like an eternity that ended too soon, Emily comes back into the room.
âDo you want to talk to Emily alone?â my mother asks me.
âNo, itâs okay. You can stay for this,â I tell her. She nods her head and gives my hand another gentle squeeze.
âHi Jack,â Emily opens with. âAfter meeting with Dr. Johansson and a few other members of the clinical staff, it was decided that inpatient care will best meet your needs right now.â I nod my head in understanding. I was hoping it wouldnât come to this, but honestly, what else did I expect? I am actively suicidal. I tried to kill myself twice in less than a day. Itâs probably past time for this to happen. âWe donât have a placement for you yet,â Emily continues, âbecause our unit has no more beds available, but weâve started contacting other area facilities to check their availability. If none of them have space, then weâll have to start searching further out, which will take more time, but we will find somewhere for you.â I nod my head again, and my mother murmurs a soft thanks to her before she leaves. I expect my father to step back into the room after she leaves, but after a tense moment, he doesnât.
âWould you like me to tell your father?â I nod my head. âOkay, sweetheart, Iâll be right back.â I let her hand fall from mine as she walks away to go talk to my father. I hear the sounds of their hushed arguing outside for a few minutes, and then my mother comes back in, looking slightly exasperated. I raise an eyebrow to her, basically me asking her what happened without actually saying anything. She shakes her head. âYour father just being your father,â she answers. âArguing against the doctorâs decision, saying you donât need that, we can take care of this at home, etc. Going on about what he thinks is really the right choice, even if itâs not. So I sent him home to pack you a bag. That way, he can make himself useful while he stews, instead of just pacing back and forth outside the door.â I grunt amusedly, and accept my motherâs hand back into mine as she sits down into one of the chairs next to the bed, resting my head on her shoulder. She leans her head on top of mine, and places her free hand on the side of my head. After a few minutes I feel some wetness on the side of my head, and guess correctly that my mother is crying, and give her hand a slight squeeze.
âItâs gonna be okay, mom. Weâll get through this, okay. Weâll get through this.â
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The Flesh and The Blade
My flesh could tell you more about the blade of my knife than any salesman ever could. From a distance, they look like best friends. They meet up almost every day, know each other so well that some would consider their relationship intimate. Upon closer inspection, however, the damaging nature of their relationship is revealed. When they meet up, itâs always my flesh giving in, my knife taking anything it wants. Their relationship is heavily skewed, my flesh always at the beck and call of my knife.
They are both so familiar with each otherâs curves, know the ins and outs of each otherâs edges and depressions as it they were their own.
Every day, despite the taxing nature of their encounters, my flesh waits, patiently but anxiously, for their pre-planned meet-up. When my knife fails to show, with or without warning, my flesh gets scared. What if itâs the last opportunity? What if they never meet up again? Thereâs no real reason to be scared: itâs a relationship that never should of happened to begin with, considered forbidden by some, like Romeo and Juliet: foolish, reckless, impulsive, risky. Perhaps they should consider themselves lucky to have even had a relationship at all. But they are unable to see that. When things get put on hold, they get antsy, longing to give and take.
When it looks like the end, they part ways, sometimes willingly, sometimes not, unsure of whether or not they will meet again, but ever hopeful they will.
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Donât Ask, Donât Tell
My brain operates on a policy of donât ask, donât tell. If you donât ask me about it, then I canât tell you, even when I want to. I will burn myself to the ground holding in all the things I want to reveal, because if you donât aim the questions my way, then I assume you donât want to know.
Even when Iâm asked, most of the time, I canât answer. I want to answer, the words circling my brain like a vulture when it spots a dead animal. A wall builds itself instantly between my brain and my mouth, blocking everything I want to say. There is no way around this wall. Its foundation goes so deep, it stretches down to the core of my being. Its reach goes so high, it surpasses my anxiety when itâs riding in outer space. It stretches so wide its edges encircle me like a hug I never wanted or asked for.
I try running away from the wall, try to find a place where it isnât, but no matter how far I run, no matter how many twists I take and turns I make, the wall is always there waiting for me, grinning a perpetual smile of victory over my pathetic windedness of defeat.
The only way to bring down the wall is to stop asking questions. Leave the topic, and the wall crumbles, no longer having anything to support it. Even then, Iâm tentative. I donât want to run headfirst into the wall just because I lowered my situational awareness.
Donât ask me questions, and I wonât tell you whatâs going on. Ask me questions, and my brain screams at my, âDonât tell them whatâs going on.â Either way, itâs a lose-lose situation, a catch-all catch twenty-two.
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Safety Net
My knife is the safety net for the trapeze act that is my life. Itâs nice to know itâs there, even if I donât use it. When itâs not there, Iâm uncertain of even climbing up to the platform, let alone stepping off of it.
The smooth bevel, sharpened to a precision edge, slows my descent without jarring me to a stop, cradling me through my unintended dismounts, until I have both feet safely on the ground again.
When I see it stretched out below me, I feel peaceful, at east with everything Iâm about to do. Knowing that even if I mess something up, Iâll be okay, relaxes me, gives me confidence. When the net is gone, I freak out. What if I fall from the bar? Or miss a transition from one move to the next? It will no longer be a thrill-inducing rush to the bottom, but a terrifying drop to what may as well be the end.
No matter how much I practice, Iâm not comfortable with my act without my safety net below me. When I know the safety net is gone, I become shaky, unsure of not just my act, but of myself, my abilities.
My reliance on my safety net make me question if Iâm really cut out for this. Even though my peers and mentors assure me of their confidence in me, I find that my own is waning. How can I excel when I canât push my own limits? How can I move on to bigger and better things when I am only getting smaller and weaker?
I fear that I donât know how to function without my safety net.
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The Rock
Sometimes I am a boulder of granite that withstands the tests of time. At others, I am limestone, eroded down, particle by particle. I have been the trusted supports of countless others, a strong place to lean and rest when they feel weak. I am trusted to stand on my own, left with confidence that I will never topple.
They donât see it, but over time my foundation shifts. Sometimes, it leaves me more steady than before, the ground beneath me more solidified. Other times, however, Iâm left shaky and loose, wobbling at the slightest touch. During these times, they tend to stay away, for fear of disturbing me too much, except for the few who try to build supports around me in hopes of keeping me in place.
I donât mind helping others, but over time, I get worn down. Even the hardest rocks are worn by the elements. Jagged edges, formed by cuts and beatings, smoothed by flowing waters and blowing winds. My composition changes on a daily basis, and sometimes even hour by hour. I can withstand hail storms one day, and the next be broken down by the slightest mist.
Eventually, I can take no more. When my structure has worn away, and the foundation leaves me wobbling, I crumble. I can fight like hell to slow it down, others can try to push and pull me together, but it always has been, and always will be, a losing fight. When it comes down to man versus nature, nature always, inevitably, wins. It may take days, weeks, months, years, even millennia, but nature
will always
win.
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I Had to Learn to Love Myself
When I was little, I learned that I was unlikeable, worthless, ugly, stupid, a mess, useless. When I got older I learned that I had to learn to love myself.
I tried to ignore everyone and everything, but that wasnât good enough. I was told I had to love myself, that if I didnât know how to, I would learn how to.
I tried the tight embrace of depression, the sharp caress of razor blades, got the warm fuzzy feeling from looking over the edge of the abyss into the nothingness beyond. I tried the parental sternness of appetite restriction, felt the post-workout euphoria from stressing myself out all the time. But still, that wasnât good enough. I was still told that I was not loving myself.Â
I had to learn to love myself, but I didnât know where to start. Everyone was so willing to tell me what I was doing wrong, but hardly anyone seemed willing to show me what to do right, to teach me.Â
How am I supposed to learn when I receive nothing to be taught? I can teach myself, but I need something to learn from. I need examples of the right things, not to just continuously be told Iâm doing the wrong things.Â
I knew I had to learn to love myself, but I didnât know how to learn how to do that. I decided that nothing I intentionally did was going to be right, so I may as well just stop trying. I stopped trying so hard to love myself and to learn how to.Â
I stopped loving myself and embraced the self-hatred that despised everything about my existence. I hated who I was and everything about myself. I couldnât stand looking in the mirror because I couldnât recognize the person staring back at me. I had given up on myself.Â
Then, with the help of a few people, I found myself. Slowly, I started to recognize my reflection, one piece at a time. The person staring me down in the mirror started looking a little more familiar every time, started looking a little more like me.Â
I learned to embrace my reflection: to appreciate the way my hair flips and curls; to enjoy the arches and angles of my body as it flows from head to feet; to be proud of the skin and scars that protect my body; to project the smile that portrays my personality; to support that muscles that hold and lift me up.Â
I learned to love my reflection, and through my reflection, I learned to love myself.
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To Her
To the person I thought I was for eighteen and a half years: Iâm sorry. Iâm sorry for all the hell you went through to germinate my seed; Iâm sorry you will never again have the tenacity that fertilized me, that you wonât be able to harvest the strength I grew from. Iâm sorry you had to wilt for me to blossom.
As much as I try to pull your weeds from my garden, I canât get them all, and the ones that I do pull leave gaping holes, showing just how intricate and deep your roots ran. Sometimes I wonder if itâs really that bad to leave the weeds. Are they really doing that much harm to my plants? Are they really so detrimental to their nutrition that I have to remove them? I donât think so, but itâs confusing to others when I show them my garden, and they see your weeds mixed in with my flowers. They wonder why theyâre there, why havenât I removed them? They question if I even try to, like I donât know what Iâm doing, like I donât know how to grow my own garden.
As much as I try to separate myself from you sometimes, I still miss you. Sometimes, I pine for you so badly that, for a few moments, I climb out of my skin, and back into yours, but each time I do, it feels off. Something that once seemed so familiar, like a favorite cotton t-shirt that I could easily sleep in for a month straight, has turned into something so strange and uncomfortable, like wearing a scratchy wool sweater in the middle of August.
Oftentimes I wonder what would have happened to you if I hadnât dug my way out, what you couldâve become. Would you have become everything you ever dreamed? Forgive me, for I have misplaced your aspirations in the search for my own, so I donât remember what your dreams were. I can only hope that they were similar to mine, so that when I chase after my dreams, Iâm not dragging you from yours. I can only hope that when I rise to meet my challenges, Iâm not pushing you under yours.
Somedays, I wonder why I donât just let go of you completely. Move on, start over. Part of me yearns to, pushes me to cover you up, suffocate you under a new layer of top soil, let you decay into the garden bed. But then where would I be? How would I explain where my roots came from, how they developed? How could I describe what nourished them without bringing you up?
Every time I put down a new layer of fertilizer, your sprouts always poke through. Explaining name changes and medications and surgery; telling people, âOh I wasnât in boy scouts. I was in a different kind of scouts.â Itâs impossible for me to show off the fruits of my labor without crediting you. I didnât sow my seeds, didnât spread the fertilizer, water the plants. That was all you. I merely took over where you left off, let myself be credited for your work.
Sometimes I think about just uprooting the entire garden, pulling everything out and starting over. But then I wonder if I would actually replant anything. Would I put in the effort to cultivate you again alongside myself? Iâd like to say that I would, but these days, Iâm not so certain.
You float around my head from time to time, like a stray balloon released into the sky. Everyone in sight watched intently until itâs too small to see, just a pin prick amongst blue and white. I watch you intently through memories and flashbacks, old photos and videos, mementos and stories. I watch as you drift out of sight, almost out of mind, and I wonder what will become of you. Will you eventually fade away, becoming no more than a pin prick in the sky of my mind?
For now, I think youâre safe, because you still sit in the back of my mind, like a patient wasting away in a hospital bed in a coma ward, hooked up to a ventilator, barely clinging to this life, because I canât quite bring myself to pull the plug just yet.
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Self Harm
Sometimes I inspect other peopleâs arms from a distance, hoping to see mine mirrored on theirs. I donât know why I do, because regardless of what I see, I always end up staring disdainfully back at my own. Even if I saw what I hoped to see, what would I say? How would I tell them that I share their pain?Â
Whenever Iâm asked the question, âWhen did you start cutting?â I always answer âAt the end of my freshman year of high school.â Itâs not wrong, but itâs not entirely right. I know the inferred question is really âWhen did the self-injurious behavior begin?â but thereâs no inferred answer that really is the truth in my response.
I always say that Iâm open and willing to talk about my mental health history, but the reality is that I canât when I need to the most. This is because the times that I need to the most are the times that Iâm caught off-guard. You see, the only times I can really talk about my past are in casual conversations where it doesnât seem to matter, or in prearranged opportunities that Iâve had time to prepare for, and even then, I canât say everything I wanted and intended to because my brain stops me, says âWait! What if I say too much? What if I scare them away? What if I cause them too much concern?â
The truth is, Iâm scared. I want to be an open source that can help people, but Iâm scared of stigmas and ridicule and consequences. Iâm scared that Iâll be called brave, or strong, or be turned into some kind of martyr. Itâs not that Iâm not brave or strong, but that theyâll be calling me those for the wrong reasons. Iâm scared of figuring out my past, of finding out the diagnoses Iâve suspected for years.
Iâm scared of admitting that the earliest clear memory I have of causing harm to myself was when I gave myself a paper cut in kindergarten when I was helping pass out construction paper to the class. I know a paper cut doesnât seem like much, but itâs the fact that I knew that if I held the stack of papers just right, and if I drew the paper across my fingers just right as I pulled them off the stack that I could give myself a paper cut, and that I desired that outcome, and performed the action until I achieved that outcome.
Everyone else has always drawn the association of my self-harm to my depression, and a bad way to cope with stress, and I went with it, because at the time I didnât know any better. I didnât make the connection that this is something that has been going on my entire life. I didnât connect the dots of what I did that one day in kindergarten with the stories that I used to make up with the way that I used to do things to âaccidentallyâ hurt myself. I didnât make the connection until later about how much anger and self-hatred was fueling my behavior.
I remember sitting in my high-school social workerâs office with my science teacher at the end of finals week of my freshman year of high school, and the social worker asked a question about when it all began, implying the depression and self-harm. I donât remember exactly what my answer was, but Iâm pretty sure it wasnât the entire truth, because it wasnât until after I had left her office that I had the realization that I could trace my depression at least back to middle school.
I used to cling to the notion that if I could reach a certain amount of time clean, then it would just go away, vanish from my life, like it never existed in the first place. Honestly though, with each milestone I reach, it only gets harder. Every anniversary I pass amplifies the thoughts and desires and longing. I know this is something Iâll have to deal with for the rest of my life, but I canât help but to wonder how, to what extent? There are parts of me that see this happening on and off for the rest of my life. Thatâs how itâs been so far, and whoâs to say that it will change so drastically in the future that it will disappear from my thoughts and actions? Whoâs to say that at some point in the future I wonât get so angry that I feel like I need to hit something, and I wonât give in and punch a wall, hoping to break my hand? Iâve felt that desire before, and how do I know that when it happens again in the future Iâll be just barely strong enough to resist?
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My Bear Blankie
Blue edges, a pattern of stars and moons on the back, with teddy-bear looking puppy dogs on the front, and patterned blocks of stars and moons, crisscrossed stripes with clouds, and odd little polka-dots. The colors are faded and the fabric, clearly worn, with a few small holes here and there, loose threads hanging off everywhere. This is my baby blanket. Made by my mother, Iâve had it from the time I was born, and plan to have it until the day I die: my bear blankie.
This blanket has never left my side. It lives on my bed, travels with me everywhere I go thatâs an overnight trip. When I sleep, you can usually find it nestled between me and my stuffed animals, my head and my pillow. If itâs not there, then chances are Iâve been asleep for a while, and itâs either fallen over the edge of the bed, or Iâve thrown it over, as I sometimes do with the things with which I sleep.
This blanket has been my comfort through many tough times. It has been the receptacle of tears and snot, sometimes a little unintentional blood, and the germs from many an illness. It has helped soothe stress and heal hurt, much like a giant band-aid, but it has never been a cure-all for these conditions and ailments. It has merely been a place holder for the emotional consolement I needed but never received. When I wanted you but you werenât around, I reached straight for that blanket. It was almost like you were there with me. When I needed my mommy, I reached out to my bear blankie. When I cry for my parents, it is always into that blanket those tears are shed.
As I grow older, and I learn more and more of my motherâs true colors, I find myself wondering more and more why I still sleep with my bear blankie. Itâs not really a positional comfort thing like it is with my stuffed animals. Itâs not like I canât sleep without it like Iâm sure was the case when I was little. At this point, Iâd like to think itâs just a force of habit that keeps me sleeping with it, like something just feels âoffâ if I try to sleep without it.
I used to think that my bear blankie was the presence of my mother when she wasnât around because in my mind it reminded me of her, represented her when she wasnât there. But now I realize that I used my bear blankie to represent the parts of her that were never there to begin with, as if when she made the blanket, she physically separated those parts of her and sewed them into the blanket for safe keeping, and forgot to detach them later. Twenty-one years spent wondering where those parts of her were, and I just now realize that theyâve been by my side all along.
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Endings
Iâve often wondered why, in my writing, the first thing I think of is the end. When I come up with an idea for a story, itâs always started at the climax, and then how I want it to end. When I write poetry, itâs almost always the last few lines that the rest comes from. Maybe itâs because Iâm so much better at saying goodbye than I am at saying hello. Lord knows I have the damndest time trying to start a conversation, but, except for the ones that end in an awkward silence, Iâm not too shabby at ending them.
Maybe Iâm so focused on endings because, for me, it doesnât matter how it begins. Beginnings donât leave impressions the way endings do. No one remembers when a star is born, but everyone clambers outside to watch a meteor shower. No one cares what happens at the beginning of a race; itâs only the last, cut-throat seconds that matter, who will overtake whom to win. No one pays attention to the precipitating events, only to the bullets, ropes, pills, blades, that cause the end.Â
Maybe itâs because Iâve had too much practice at saying goodbye: to pets that have died; to friendships that grew distant; to people from summer camp I would never see again; to two out of six grandparents that passed away, twelve years apart; to the person I thought I was before I transitioned. To my Dad, not knowing it would be thirteen years before I would see him again, and every time I say it now, fearing it will be another thirteen more. To the people I called family before seeing their true colors; to the great person I used to think my step-father was. To the person I used to think my mother was before I grew up. To my childhood, gone in a couple blinks of an eye, taking my innocence but not my naivetĂ©.Â
Perhaps itâs time to learn how to say âHello.â
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Broken People
As I sat with a friend through a panic attack, I found myself asking the question: why do I befriend other broken people? My first reactions was to hate myself for asking that question, because as a broken person myself, how dare I? Then my response became this: broken people seek out other broken people because they know.
They know the pain of getting broken and desperately trying to shove the pieces back together. They know the pain of realizing that theyâre broken. They know the pain of realizing why theyâre broken. They know the pain of not wanting to be broken. They know the pain of learning that itâs okay to be broken.
They know what kind of support to give to fellow broken people, because they know what kind of support they needed and didnât get. They know how to love other broken people because they know that they themselves are not easy to love, but that that love is so very real. They know how to help take care of each other, because they know how to recognize wants and needs that others donât. They know how to communicate with each other, because they know that talking isnât always easy, and they know how to read nonverbal cues.
They know from their own experiences what the experiences of others were like. They know without having to listen to explanations, without having to explain.
Broken people know.
They just know.
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