Tuesday, August 12, 2014

I have scars, but I. Am. Alive.

I first cut myself when I was 15 years old. I remember the day very well because it was Valentine's Day and I was sitting on a stranger's house in a trailer park while my Loser Boyfriend got stoned. The room was filled with smoke and their eyes were so chinked that no one noticed when I found some random person's pocketknife and dragged it across my wrist. I could think of a thousand more romantic ways to spend such a holiday with the boy to whom I'd given my virginity just a month prior. Depressing, yes. But symptomatic?

Though that was the first time I had cut myself, it certainly wasn't the first time I'd felt so empty inside. I lived in a small ranch-style house with a big backyard for the first 5 years of my life. I have very few memories of that house, but one that stands out is this: I'm sitting on the edge of the patio watching as my brother plays with a couple other boys, our neighbors. I don't mind being alone, I actually prefer it. But I just wish I didn't feel so lonely.

There is a voice inside my head and it is my enemy. It tells me that I'm not good enough. I'm not smart enough. I'm not pretty enough. And more than anything, I am alone. It's a dirty fucking liar. That voice has been my constant companion for as long as I can remember.

Sitting in the smoke-filled trailer, I told myself, "No one will ever love you," as I dragged the knife across my arm. It had little to do with my Loser Boyfriend and everything to do with myself, my own self-worth. I didn't love me.

I soon found that razor-blades worked better than pocketknives. They made precise little slits into my flesh, nearly as thin as a paper cut. We had a box-cutter in the garage and the little razors that come inside them were perfect. I nearly always cut on my forearm. I would fashion them to look like scratches and when people asked, I'd tell them my cat did it. I'd never owned a cat. When too many people started questioning me, and one or two accused me of doing it for attention, I started wearing long-sleeves all the time, even in summer. I remember bleeding through my shirt in the dead heat of summer at the beginning of my sophomore year of high school and screaming in my head, "Why hasn't anyone noticed?!" I desperately wanted someone to look me in the eye and say, "I know you're going through hell in your own mind. I'm here for you." Or maybe, "You are not alone. I've been there. It gets better."

Pause; but keep going. #semicolonproject


The blood gave me a release. I had all this pain inside of me and I couldn't comprehend it. No one could see it, not even me. If I can't see it, is it even real? Having something to look at, something to see and say, "This. This is what ails me. This is my suffering." I could count them. Sometimes I would name them to myself, a reminder that it's not all in my head. "This one is for when I missed that pop fly in the outfield, this one is for not doing the dishes right and making Mom yell at me at 6am, this one is for when I went ahead with him even though I didn't really want to." It wasn't just that voice in my head making things up. There were actual instances of my numerous failures and shortcomings. I wasn't simply wallowing in my misery.

I think the worst it got was when I brought a razor blade to school with me because I didn't think I could make it through the day without either having a panic attack or cutting myself. I don't remember why I was particularly anxious that day, but I just knew I couldn't make it through without it. I tucked the blade in my sock and felt it rub my ankle all day. Under my desk, I crossed my ankle over my leg, wielded the razor, and made small slices in the flesh of my leg.

My best friends finally spoke up. What had taken them so long? I wondered. "You're scaring me," Shelby told me with tears in her eyes. "I don't want you to hurt yourself. I love you. Please stop. Please, for me if not for yourself." I choked up and nodded, grateful that someone in my life cared. Cared enough to cry over me hurting myself. And she didn't even know about my thoughts of suicide (pills, maybe?) or my frequent wish that I'd never been born.

My Loser Boyfriend finally said something too. He told me he'd break up with me if I cut myself again. That only made me feel guilty about it, which made me hate myself even more. And the hatred made me want to cut more and when I cut, I knew I was disappointing my friends and my boyfriend. Such is the vicious nature of the cycle. Finally, he tried a different approach. He convinced me to tell my parents, to try to get help. Recognizing the loop I was stuck in, I agreed.

My dad was away on a hunting trip when I decided to tell my mother. Maybe she was having a bad night, or maybe I picked the wrong time to unload on her, without my dad there to support her. Whatever the reason, she did not take the news well. My Loser Boyfriend sat quietly by my side as I cried and confessed to my mother that I had been cutting myself and that I thought I needed to see a therapist. I wasn't expecting a tearful embrace or any sort of consoling. But I also was not expecting the cold, uncompassionate response I received. "Why are you telling me this?" she asked. "Why now? Of course you want to talk to someone. Everyone in the world would love to have a therapist to listen to all of their problems. We can't afford that." I cried and begged her to understand. It wasn't just normal teenage angst, I insisted. I lifted my sleeves and showed her the cuts. "I will not walk on eggshells because you feel sad," she declared, slamming the book on the conversation. I was devastated.

I realized then that it would be up to me to pull myself out of this. Luckily, I grew up with the world at my fingertips, as long as I had the patience to wait for the dial-up modem. The internet has been a constant resource, offering stories of people who had been there, who traveled down that dark tunnel with nary a light at the end, and who had made it out the other side. It is my hope now that I can do the same for others searching for hope.

You are not alone. It gets better.

I have scars, but I. Am. Alive.

More to come...