15 October 2016

Nineteen, in between

This blog post brought to you by the number 19 and the letters SOS.

First of all, how are we supposed to label nineteen year olds?  You're an adult at eighteen, but you stop being a teenager at twenty?  And most people define adulthood as being over twenty-one, so if you're nineteen or twenty you're just screwed.  Can't even call yourself a "young adult" because that's how people refer to like eighth graders.

I'm not stupid, I know adulthood is sort of abstract and it depends on unquantifiable things like maturity, but sometimes I just want to slap a label on something and be done with it, you know?

Nineteen is also one of those non-special birthdays (like 10, 13, 16, 18, 21, etc).  Nothing changes, no new activities become legal (or illegal) due to the number of laps you've taken around the sun.  Which is why it came as such a surprise to me that being nineteen is kind of a big deal. A lot of people, both celebrities and people close to me, did "the thing" that set their lives in motion when they were my age.  I know I moved to Arizona and stuff but that was passive.  I didn't invent new technology or create some inspiring piece of media or meet the love of my life or anything like that.  

The cool thing is I still have about three months left of this "prime" age (ha ha ha), so if I'm supposed to do something big I have time.  Unfortunately, I have no idea what that would be.  The problem is that there isn't this One Thing that I'm really good at and passionate about.  I have like ten different hobbies and I'm fairly good at all of them, but that doesn't mean anything.  

I'm not sure if this is universal, but I've always felt too old.  I remember being eleven and watching home movies, thinking that I would give anything to go back to being a toddler.  I think I had my first mid life crisis at age thirteen.  It was intense.  I had been seriously studying theater at my school for the arts, and everything pointed to the fact that I should have started sooner.  I'm pretty sure I had been watching a lot of Shirley Temple movies, and they were not helping.  I had friends who were already successful in the arts: friends who were print models, had small parts in movies, things like that.  I looked at their work and then back at mine (which consisted wholly of school plays) and was crushed.  Eventually I did a few small ads, and a little TV (five episodes of a hokey show Fox aired on Saturday mornings to teach teens about bad decisions), but I was still woefully behind where I felt I should have been, so I stopped all together.

On the other hand, I know I'm young, relatively.  One thing that makes me feel better is knowing that if I ever get a Wikipedia page, my entire life so far wouldn't be on it.  Look up anyone who isn't a child star and it begins with the college they graduated from.  I'm still under the "Early Life" tab (though if I did have a mid life crisis at thirteen, I've only got seven years left).  The other thing is that usually when people do "The Thing", they don't know it's happening while they're doing it.  When my parents met each other at nineteen, they had no idea they'd eventually get married.  Nineteen year old Carrie Fisher couldn't have known that Star Wars would take off the way it did.  And I'm sure nobody was patting Bill Gates on the back when he dropped out of Harvard his sophomore year.

So I'm left with a large amount of inspiration and no idea what to do with it.  It's a frustrating cocktail of passion, confusion, self-doubt that I'm still figuring out how to drink (which is still illegal for another two years).

08 October 2016

I'll Take The Sticks And Stones, Please


Warning: This essay addresses a variety of mental illnesses and their symptoms.  It is very personal and not very funny. 

Sticks and stones may break my bones but words can  never hurt me”, said no one ever.  Words are the worst.  And the worst thing about them is that sometimes we use hurtful words without realizing it.  The media is comfortable using  mental illness terms as regular adjectives, so we are too.   However, this is not a victimless oversight. Mental illness is a favorite subject in the media; unfortunately, the way it is presented is inaccurate and hurtful.  This gives society the wrong idea about what it actually means to be mentally ill, and the acceptability of certain terminology.  Why are horror movies often set in and around mental hospitals?  Why is schizophrenia a popular “character trait” for villains?  Why is it okay to say “I’m so depressed” when facing a minor inconvenience?  As a person who has suffered from mental illness, and seen friends and family members suffer as well, this subject is very important to me.  My goal is not to make others feel guilty for enjoying certain movies or television shows, only to think critically about the messages they send and the phrasing they use.  I also ask that my readers take a close look at their own vocabulary and see if anything needs sifting out.  The way we perceive and appropriate mental illness may be rooted in the media, but the words that come out of our mouths are entirely ours to control.
I was always a bit annoyed with people who used these terms inaccurately, but it wasn’t always coming from the right place.  I used to be really passionate about using words properly (I was that annoying person who pointed out when someone said “literally” when they meant “figuratively”).  So when my friend said in half-earnest, “You [expletive], now I’m depressed” in response to an insult from her older sister, I became irritated.  Was I angry on behalf of people who actually have depression, and live most of their days in sadness or numbness? No, fifteen year old me was annoyed because a girl said “depressed” when she meant “offended”.  Had I heard that exchange more recently, I would have been equally annoyed but for a completely different reason.
Like most people, I was not aware of this issue until it was brought to my attention, though I received my lesson the hard way.  Throughout high school, I battled an eating disorder that peaked during my senior year.  I realized what was happening and knew I needed help but I was terrified to admit it.  Most people I knew thought eating disorders only happened to shallow people who only valued looks.  I didn’t want anyone to think that of me, so I hid my condition for a long time.  When I finally told my parents they were sad, but wonderfully understanding.  They helped me to get the help I needed.  
Due to the trifecta of depression, panic disorder, and anorexia, I eventually started going to therapy six hours a day.  Even there, certain mental illness terms were banned, which I found fascinating.  Even at a place where I was supposed to be completely honest, I wasn’t allowed to say words at the risk that they could hurt somebody else in the group.  I viewed this as a positive thing.  It wasn’t censorship, it was consideration.  I became more sensitive to phrases, and I was surprised when other people weren’t.  Around this time, I had a conversation with one of my friends in “the real world” who was about to go on an audition.  He mentioned nerves, which was understandable, but then he said “I’m gonna have a panic attack”.  I immediately went into caring-mode and asked if he was okay, and whether he needed me to bring him anything.  He gave me a confused look and said “No, I’m fine.  It was a joke”.  After having recently begun to experience regular panic attacks myself, I didn’t even register that it was supposed to be a joke.  Panic attacks were something scary, humiliating, and exhausting.  I was perplexed that someone could use the term so lightly.
When I was finally back at school after the long recovery process, one of my best friends asked me “Was it anorexia or bulimia? Wait, obviously not anorexia, you’re a normal weight”, while looking my body up and down.  Aside from making me feel very vulnerable and anxious, this comment made me realize that we think eating disorders are visible and visibly distinguishable from each other, and usually they are not.  So there is a lack of understanding that usually accompanies a lack of tact.  I felt like I had been punched in the gut every time I heard my diagnoses used as adjectives. The example that sticks out most in my mind occurred while I was watching TV with my family.  The main character was hoping to be accepted to a certain college, and she had finally received the letter.  Eyeing the envelope, she pronounced it “a little anorexic to be an acceptance letter.”  I couldn’t breathe.  What amazed me the most was that my family did not pick up on this at all.  They did not notice the phrase, or my reaction (which to be fair, was silent).  Of course, I would never hold this against my family.  I had become very sensitive to mental illness terms, and it’s understandable that they had not.  It did bring to light though how incidents like this occur all the time and we have to work hard to notice them.  I also realized that not only was the line insensitive, it was inaccurate.  The media was spreading false ideas of what anorexia is. The character could have just said “thin”, and the scene would remain unchanged.  It only takes a few seconds to think of an alternate word, and it could save someone from being reminded of the worst time of their life.
In case that last sentence seems extreme, I can assure you it is not unrealistic.  A few months after I came out of intensive therapy, I was watching The Perks of Being a Wallflower with friends.  At one point, the female lead jokes, “I'm not a bulimic, I'm a bulimist!” (It should be noted that the character did not have an eating disorder).  The line offered nothing to the plot except to establish said character as “quirky” and could have been wholly left out.  Meanwhile, I felt like I had the wind knocked out of me.  I stood up and walked to my room, hoping to breathe for a few minutes and return to my friends.  However, I ended up having a full-blown panic attack.  In minutes, I had transformed from laughing and surrounded by friends, to crying and hyperventilating on the floor alone.  No one else had picked up on the line, and only one person even noticed I had left.
Perhaps coincidentally, perhaps not, that person later revealed to me that they had been struggling with bipolar disorder for most of their life.  It was frustrating that people often found it “scary” instead of attempting to understand.  My friend had concerns similar to mine, telling me that they winced every time someone said “the weather has been really bipolar lately” and things to that effect.  I had to admit that I said stuff like that all the time, but promised to stop.  To this day, I do not use “bipolar” to describe anything other than a person with that specific diagnosis, and I am quick to gently correct people who do.
And that is all I am asking you to do.  Examine your own language and see if any words need to go.  Mental illness terms are of course fine to say, providing we are using them in the way they are meant to be used.  For example, when the situation calls for it, I say “I used to have anorexia”, but I would never say “I should get anorexic to lose some weight”.   Other phrases such as “I’m so full, I wish I was bulimic”, “my mom is so bipolar sometimes”, “You’re giving me an anxiety attack”, should be discarded (unless they are said in sincerity, in which case proper concern should follow). I am not asking anyone to boycott The Perks of Being a Wallflower, nor to stop watching TV shows like Criminal Minds or movies like Suicide Squad (both of which contain numerous villains who are all mentally ill).  Watch what you want, only take it with a grain of salt.  Know that media representations of mental illness are not sufficiently reliable, including the idea that mental illnesses are terms that can be applied to anything distasteful. Also, be part of the positive change.  If you notice a friend using terms that could be insensitive or anxiety-inducing, gently correct them.  Our words can hurt, and the best thing we can do is try to minimize their negative effects.

01 October 2016

School-Hopping


                5th grade me (the one in desperate need of braces) during my first year at CPFA

I've been "school-hopping" all my life.  From preschool through 2nd grade I was homeschooled.  From 3rd through 4th grade I went to a cyber charter school.  In fifth grade I started at PALCS and CPFA (art  school), and in 8th grade I added USP (accelerated learning program).  In 11th grade I went to my local public school, and 12th grade I went back to PALCS, CPFA and USP.  (Cut to Jim Halpert saying mid sentence "I'm boring myself just talking about this") Freshman year of college I went to Lancaster Bible College and now in my sophomore year I'm at Arizona State University.  

It's been a long time since I've gone to the same school two years in a row.  I go through schools like Hogwarts goes through Dark Arts professors (though if I went to Hogwarts I'd probably stay).  Hopefully this year will break the curse.

I'm pretty sure I'll be at ASU for a while though.  Even if I end up not liking where I am, I can switch campuses or something.  I'm not transferring again, at least while I'm in undergrad.  Transferring is a PAIN, man.  I thought it was bad in high school, but it's even worse in college.  Sure, switching high schools is a lot of paperwork, but they take all your credits.  For some reason, ASU didn't take my "Engaging Faith & Life" credit (not that I blame them lol).  Which means I have to keep making up gen eds I thought I was done with.

Look, I'm happy at ASU and I know I'm lucky to be here.  The pros outweigh the cons tenfold.  But that doesn't mean the cons don't exist.  And it's my blog and I can whine if I want to.

In some ways it's like being a freshman again. I had to start from scratch making friends, and most of my new friends are freshmen.  I have to get used to the campus, the meal schedule, and the professors.  I have to build a rapport with administrators.  It like, ugh, I just did this, man!  Sophomores are supposed to be able to chill and lie back on their laurels a little.  Not me!  I exchanged laurel for cacti, and nobody wants to lie back on those.

It's nice to know that some things never change though.
                  
                   Shenanigans at LBC                                                  Shenanigans at ASU