So I'm in college now. I guess this
makes me officially old. You'll laugh at that, of course – not old,
but in truth an independent adult. And of course, all the changes to
my life right now mean that this blog is going to be changing as
well. I no longer have the single theme of living abroad to focus on,
nor do I have an internship that requires me to blog about my
everyday life. Instead I'd like to write more about what already
inspires me most – politics, culture, feminism, and people-watching
(social observations!). Obviously I haven't hesitated to do so during
this past year, and these posts have also been the most successful,
with my most-read posts being, in order, I
have a massive crush on humanity on the negativity of radical
feminism, 5
things about feminism I agree with, my personal favorite The
American Essence on American intellectualism, ambition, and
competition (which I consider a summary of all my thoughts on living
in France), and finally Charity,
discussing how to rationally make the world a better place. Clearly
my faithful readers agree with me on which topics are the most
interesting. With that being said, I'll be writing much less about my
day-to-day life and more about the interesting stuff. Today I'm going
to write about what it's like to be awkward, a topic I've been
meaning to cover for ages (and covered briefly here).
Imagine that you are a martian. You are
trying to fit in on Earth, even though you are very unlike the
Earthlings. And you are terrified that they will find out your true
identity, that you are Not One of Them. You get the feeling that
everything you do isn't the right (well, normal) way to do things,
right down to the clothes you wear, the lunches you eat, the things
that interest you, and the way you staple your homework together. Ok,
maybe that last one is an exaggeration, but maybe not. I was joking
with my dear friend May about “not getting the memo” – that is,
when I was in middle school I didn't get the memo that stretchy pants
weren't socially acceptable, I didn't get the memo when everyone
started shaving their legs, etc. Maybe other girls have mothers who
explain these things to them, or maybe they're just more aware of
their surroundings, I don't know. But either way, I never got the
memo, and somehow this contributed to the feeling of being not the
same species as those around me.
One thing I always admired is how
people with confidence acknowledge their differences without thinking
it's awkward or special. People have lots of variations in their
everyday lives, and sometimes they don't learn all the same things at
the same time. Some of my new friends in college just learned how to
do laundry this weekend, whereas I've been doing mine since age 11 or
so. Some people drink a lot of juice, some people like milk. These
personal differences are even more obvious when we're all living in
the dorms together. But a few years ago, I never would have been able
to say “I don't know how to straighten my hair” and be
comfortable with it. Being under the impression that every other girl
on the planet had obtained this skill, it would have seemed like an
admission that I was a different species, and not a simple “I am a
person who has never felt the need to straighten my hair before.”
At best, I would have made a big deal out of it, turning it into a
label – I've always liked labels way too much. It would have been
“I am not a stupid valley girl/fashionista/preppy girl, so (since I
am proud of being different and a nerd), of COURSE I don't know how
to straighten my hair!” when in reality it is silly to either be
ashamed of or make a statement out of such a simple difference.
I don't know what makes people get this
feeling. I've heard feeling that we are very different from those
around us is one of the classic signs of an introvert, but it also
has a lot to do with confidence (a trait not particularly correlated
with introversion or extroversion). A lack of confidence was a big
factor in making my middle school years (and my year in France, for
that matter) unpleasant. Fortunately, this is a trait that can be
developed. I remember really wanting to write about this topic a few
months ago, but since coming back to the US I have had much less
difficulty with this, and no longer feel as strongly about it. The
whole reason I am still dedicating a post to it is to talk about how
it gets better.
In case you aren't familiar with the It
Gets Better project, it's a project to reach out to LGBTQ youth
and tell them that life really does get better. Don't give up. It
won't always be this bad. I wish this project existed in a more
generic form, just to tell all adolescents struggling with depression
that it'll get better. I certainly had a very painful middle school
experience, and each year with the possible exception of France has
been better than the last. Talking to the younger siblings of my
friends, I can tell everyone goes through the same things. We all
have been hormonal, alienated, mean to others or bullied by others or
both, and constantly on the brink of giving up. I wish I could talk
to myself from five years ago just to give myself a little hope. And
that is also something I'd like to do with this blog, but for those
who come after me.
Step number one is just to realize that
everyone is human, not robots. They all have differences and
awkwardnesses as well. Maybe the kid sitting next to you put on his
T-shirt inside-out this morning and only fixed it when someone made
fun of him. To you, you don't even question whether it's “weird”
or not, but he might feel as mortified about that as you feel when
someone thought you were weird for not plucking your eyebrows. And
maybe the girl who discovered you don't pluck your eyebrows now feels
weird wondering if she is the only one who does. Who knows? The point
is, when it happens to other people, you don't notice. It seems
normal, because it is normal for humans to have lots of variation. So
when it happens to you, don't react like someone just saw through
your eyes into your naked soul. Just be cool. Laugh it off. There is
no normal.
Another thing that helps sometimes is
to break open your boundaries and talk to people about routines –
things you wouldn't normally talk about. Some people are very good at
the kind of everyday humor that comes with being comfortable with
this, for example, telling a funny story about tripping on his own
flipflop and faceplanting in front of some cute girls. If someone
else can tell this story and it's hilarious and makes you feel closer
to them, why can't you do the same? Answer: you probably can. The
other day I tripped walking to the dining hall and a group of people
were walking behind me. A few years ago I would have kept going
without saying a word, wishing the ground would open up and swallow
me. But then, I looked back and said “You didn't see that, right?”
with a conspiratorial wink. They laughed and we ended up having a
really nice conversation. Bonus social points for me! So if this is a
problem you suffer from as well, go tell someone about putting too
much milk on your cereal this morning and how it got soggy and
sucked. Maybe they'll even think you're funny.
When I originally intended to write
this post several months ago, it was going to be solely about the odd
sensation of being a complete outsider, both as an explanation to
those less socially challenged than I and as a request to know if
others experience the same thing. But I've been losing interest in
this topic. At first this disappointed me – darn, I should've
written it when I first had the idea – but it's actually a very
good thing. I lost interest because I don't usually feel like this
anymore, because everything's been getting better. (I really need
these messages of hope right now because a friend of mine is going
through some serious depression and I feel the need to broadcast the
It Gets Better message, so bear with me.)
I have often worried that life is
nothing more than a waiting game. In middle school, I just waited for
high school so all my problems would go away. In high school, I
waited for the beginning of every marching band season, I waited for
summer, but most of all I waited for college. Junior year I found out
I was going abroad, and I waited to leave everything I knew, start
over, and I assumed that from there everything would be perfect. In
France, I just waited to go home. The obvious concern here is this:
what if it never does get
better? What if I spend my whole life waiting, but happiness is not
actually dependent on the particular situation of the present, and
I'll never attain it?
But
now I'm in college. I've never looked forward to something beyond
college – never longed for a family or a grown-up job. So this is
the endgame of waiting, the final test to see if the waiting is
forever or if it gets fulfilled. And guess what? I'm not waiting
anymore. I never catch myself thinking “It'll be better when X is
over,” or “It'll be better when I get to do Y.” Sometimes the
days pass slowly, because there's too much to do and it can be
stressful and overwhelming. More often the days disappear like
will-o'-the-wisps, as full of laughter as of stress, fulfilling even
when they're wearing. I've only been here two weeks, but I've met
some amazing people and I even feel like I belong. A dieu, my life as
a martian. Welcome to feeling like a real person. This isn't to say
there are never hard moments. I know I'm going to struggle with two
of my classes this semester, and some days life just isn't as cheery
as I wish it could be. But I'm where I'm supposed to be, in a pretty
ideal environment for doing what I want to do.
This
has been a scatter-brained three pages. I didn't know what I wanted
to say, and life has been overwhelming. But what it comes down to is
this: If life sucks, hang on. I believe that it'll get better. I
believe that one day you'll be happy where you are. Yesterday was
World Suicide Prevention Day, and recently I've been hearing about
way too many suicides or attempted suicides. I know that sometimes
life seems hopeless, but I don't think it is. Even if it takes a
really long time to get there, it will
get better. Have hope.
Jenna, I really enjoyed reading this post. Thank you for writing it.
ReplyDeleteI wonder whether it will surprise you to learn that I never once guessed, in all the time I've known you and despite our many conversations on diverse topics over the years, that you'd ever suffered from the Martian self-image problem. I'd always thought you were among the least self-conscious persons of your age I'd ever met.
Perhaps this is mostly a confession (embarrassing, no doubt) of my own fundamental cluelessness. But I can't help suspecting that there might be a little more to the matter than that. After all, neuroscience has now revealed that that which is superficial is by no means inconsequential; smiling actually makes you happy, and one of the best ways to succeed is to "fake it till you make it." Often the dividing line between appearance and reality is blurrier than we think -- partly because our own efforts to blur that line are by no means invariably futile.
So perhaps your recent triumphs over the Martian self-image problem owe a good deal to your (to my eye, at least) uncanny skill at feigning complete indifference to it.
I wanted also to share with you a perceptive comment by the great novelist E. L. Doctorow, who said:
"Writing is like driving at night in the fog. You can only see as far as your headlights, but you can make the whole trip that way."
This is just as true about living as it is about writing. Of course we all want to see farther in the fog than we actually can; we all want to know what the road ahead is going to look like long before our headlights reveal it to us, and our yearning for this godlike foreknowledge leads us to seek out stories of our predecessors' trips down the road, which we then struggle to parse for meanings and morals that may help to guide us in our own mysterious trip.
But the past, though fascinating and profoundly instructive, is a frustratingly elliptical and ambiguous guide to the future. The stories of others teach us many valuable things, but the link between those things and the pressing issues of our own ongoing lives is essentially metaphorical. Looking for concrete, practical instruction, we instead find mostly poetry (much of it written in a foreign language.)
But believe me, Jenna, Doctorow is right: even without godlike foreknowledge, we really can make a brilliant success of the whole trip. It may be frustrating to be able to see no farther in the fog than our headlights allow, but the predicament is universal, and it's ultimately no real obstacle to living life well and fully.
So be of good cheer, dear Jenna -- and congratulations on a magnificent start!
Thank you, Laurens! I am a huge believer in the “fake it till you make it” strategy. I'd also like to point out that you have a talent for putting people at ease, and if you did not see this problem in me it is perhaps because I think of you as “my kind of people” anyway. Generally I am not uncomfortable with people I meet through Alex – or if I am, it's only because I'm less martian than they are, and can't follow their conversations about math. ;) (Of course, I'm pretty accustomed to that!)
DeleteI also appreciate the Doctorow quote. That's some pretty good advice, both for life and for novels.