I used to be “normal.”
Not in first grade, when I chewed on pencil erasers.
Not in second grade, when I got in trouble for sending dirty little notes in class — notes with extremely vulgar language! — to my best friend.
Not in third grade, when the teacher sent me to the front office to get checked for head lice — because I had dried shampoo in my hair.
Not in fourth grade, when I suddenly got heavier and wider than all of my classmates.
Not in fifth grade, when I started over at a new school and had a hard time fitting in.
Not in sixth grade, when I missed ten days of class just because I would get stress-induced stomach aches.
Not in seventh grade, when a classmate told everyone I was a lesbian just because I didn’t have a boyfriend. Not in seventh grade, when kids would make fun of my super curly hair.
Not in eighth grade, when kids were still making fun of my super curly hair.
Not in ninth grade, when my hair would get matted sometimes from not being brushed properly, because I was so depressed.
Not in tenth grade, when I felt hopeless and lonely.
Not in eleventh grade, when I struggled with my classes and realized I wasn’t really a good student.
Not in twelfth grade, when I realized I wasn’t ready for college, but that I would be expected to enroll anyway.
Not in college, when I would go to class while I was depressed, when I could barely muster the energy to shave my legs or take a shower or any of that.
Not in grad school — oh, no. Sorry. That is when I felt like a normal person. For the first time in my life, I felt like I was finally pulling things together. At 22, I finally felt normal.
Until later that year — 2016 — when everything seemed to go downhill for everybody — politically, personally, all the way around.
By 2020, I became socially-anxious, silly, germaphobic, and awkward — and it became even worse after 2020. I don’t recognize my own personality, most days. I can tell I rub other people the wrong way, but I don’t understand what I’m doing wrong — because I’m going through the same motions as everyone else. Maybe they can sense the fact that I’m lost — behind it all, I’m lost.
I felt lost between 2016 and 2020, and then I felt even more lost between 2020 and 2023.
I guess know I lost myself — the woman who was normal for one year.
I know it sounds corny, but I’ll find myself again. In 2030, maybe — or maybe tomorrow.
One can hope.