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[personal profile] ninanevermore
Today on my drive into work, I was thinking about the fact that 20 years ago when I was in high school, I was Emo before Emo was even cool. Heck, I was Emo before Emo had even been invented yet. I, at 16, helped pave the path to pathetic that so many kids now wearing their hair in their faces and writing bad poetry about suicide now claim as their own. To these kids, who feel that no one understands them, I want to tell you that I do understand you because I used to be you. This is why, when I come across one of you now, I laugh and make fun of you.

Look, Emo kids, I have some bad news and you might as well hear it from one who has been there: one of these days you are going to grow up and get over it, just like everyone is telling you to do. There's nothing you can do to stop it, unless you really do kill yourself (and you know that, despite all the talk that gets you so much attention, your heart really isn't in it, is it?).

But take comfort: there are worse things than growing up and becoming a productive member of society. For example, you could stay the way you are now. Forever. Considering how annoying you are at this point in your life, this is the worst thing that could possibly happen.

In my defense, I want to state that my fall into Emo was accidental. After my mother died during my sophomore year in high school, I was dealing with the usual teenage angzieties while while working through the stages of grief, so I had some genuine angst to lay claim to.

On a whim I jumped abord the New Wave fashion bandwagon, which innovated the bad haircuts that the Emo kids today have reclaimed as their own. I grew my bangs long so that they hang over one eye, and streaking my hair with colors like pink and blue (usually to match my outfit). The bangs alone were impressive; I went through my entire junior year of high school with no depth perception. My wardrobe staples were black leggings, big baggy shirts, and little black ankle boots. Instead of face powder I used corn starch, which gave me the pallor of a corpse. Every morning I applied copious amoount fo black eyeliner to give myself the soulful eyes of a raccoon. The New Wave stylings were just a fashion statement and not lifestyle, though, and was not Emo unto themselves.

The Emo part began after a classmate killed herself one day after school by locking herself in her parent's bedroom and shooting herself with her father's hand gun. I didn't relate to my dead classmate so much as I related to her parents. I had read that the worst thing a person can go trough is the death of a child, that it was even worse than the death of a parent. I felt bad for this girl's mother, because if her grief was worse than my own, I wasn't sure how she was surviving it.

To help myself understand the whole suicide thing, I wrote a series of poems on the subject. They weren't "I want to kill myself" poems, because I didn't want to kill myself. They were first-person narratives from the view points of people who were killing themselves, stemming from my effort to make sense of their actions. There were six poems, and each narrative used a different method and had a different motivation. Because I was a quirky kid, I titled each poem with a day of the week: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. Because I was a nice kid, I added 7th poem I called "The Sabbath," which stated that suicide was a bad idea and you shouldn't do it. I called my little collection "The Days of the Weak," which I thought was enough to show my distaste for what these narratives were up to, and because 16 year olds in general are fond of self righteous word play. If I had stopped there, that would have been the end of it. But then I showed the poems to people.

"Oh my God!" the first friend to read them exclaimed, "You aren't thinking about suicide, are you?"

"Of course not," I said, "They're just poems."

When the second friend said, "Wow, these are creepy. Are you depressed?" I answered, "Not really."

When the third friend looked worried and told me that if there was anything I needed to talk about, they were there for me, I said, "Come to think of it, I have been a little down lately."

When the forth friend told me I should get help, I told them, "I guess maybe I should."

Things went downhill from there. Suddenly, I was getting attention that I had never gotten before. People were worried. An appointment with a therapist was made. For the first time in my life, I was in the spotlight. If I wasn't self destructive before, I kind of had an obligation to be now. I couldn't let all thses dear people worry for nothing. I began writing real suicide poems about how my life was a spiral of darkness and there was no reason to go on. In other words, I gave my public what they wanted.

There is nothing wrong surrounding yourself with hype, provided you know where you're going with it and you don't start believing it. I missed on both these accounts. I began carry a razor blade around with me wherever I went, in case I needed to duck off to the girl's room to slit my wrists (I never did). I learned to mope and cry at the drop of a hat. I was a very troubled little girl. I know, because everyone said so.

When I look back on it all, it occurs to me how sad it is that no one said the three words I needed to hear most. I'm not talking about I love you. I heard that plenty. What I really needed to hear from someone was, "Cut the crap." Then I needed them to walk away and ignore me. When it finally happened, it did me a world of good.

It was only when my boyfriend dumped me for a girl who wasn't always threatening to kill herself that I snapped out of it. I learned the hard way that when someone tells you that they love you, the worst thing you can say is, "No, you don't. How could you? I'm not loveable!" When you say this enough times, eventually you convince the person that they are wrong and you are right. They really do stop loving you.

In the end, I may have lost the boy, but in doing so I found myself. He dumped me just before I graduated high school. By the time I started college 5 months later, I was Emo no more. He broke my heart, and I am forever in his debt for this.

Because of that heartbreak, I grew up. I got over it. Twenty years later, my hair is still out of my face, my eyes aren't downcast, and when someone gives me a compliment I say "thank you" instead of arguing about it. My life is not a spiral of darkness, though it does have its occasional bleak moments. True, I don't get a lot of attention now that I am hype-free, but I had enough attention back then to last me a lifetime.

Watch out, Emo kids. Instead of dying before I turned 30 (or 25) like I told everyone I would, I'm now only 2 birthdays away from turning 40. I'm married to some one who adores me, and we are raising a child together. I have a full time job, I pay my taxes, I try to recycle when I can, and I smile at strangers when they great me. If you aren't careful, all this could happen to you, too.

Scary, isn't it?


* ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * # * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * ~

Date: 2008-02-14 10:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bbart.livejournal.com
Corn starch? I used baby powder.

Date: 2008-02-14 10:08 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neanahe.livejournal.com
Corn starch has a finer texture than talcum powder and gave me smoother finish. Also, it's unscented and you can get it for free because you steal it from your parent's kitchen, where it is used for thickening soups and gravies.

Date: 2008-02-14 10:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] bbart.livejournal.com
Corn starch never occurred to teenage me. My parents had baby powder--not sure why; hadn't been a baby in the house since me--in the bathroom closet near the cosmetics so it was easily at my disposal.

Date: 2008-02-14 10:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] m-malcontent.livejournal.com
I may no longer dress in black to be a non conformist like everyone else...but I NEVER recycle...thus my angst is condemning the world to a slow painful death..bwah-ah-ah-ah

Date: 2008-02-14 10:43 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neanahe.livejournal.com
I get money for my soda cans...so I can buy more soda. It's a win-win situation. :)

Date: 2008-02-15 12:06 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jessnhalinda.livejournal.com
I went through a similar stage. I still have a copy of the "book of poetry," which was to be my great and everlasting gift to the world when I was gone--although I was hoping to die of heartbreak a la Emily Bronte. So much less messy than actually offing myself.

One of my high school poems starts "Sitting, where once they sat/Two are where one was at." I'm sure your poems were at least stylistically better.

I was accidentally goth before it was cool, simply because of my natural stick-straight very dark hair and ghastly white pallor. By the time the phenomenon known as goth had spread to my small town, I was over the angst, so I never got to be cool.

Date: 2008-02-15 08:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neanahe.livejournal.com
Are you kidding? Trailblazers are cool by nature, even if no one realizes it until later. ^_~

I haven't even looked at my teen-aged angst poems in years. I need to dig them up so I can burn them. :P

Date: 2008-02-15 12:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] welfy.livejournal.com
I was put into therapy because of the poetry I wrote in high school. Then I was diagnosed with bipolar disorder and put on a series of medications for many years. I too was going through a loss (my father's death) and it figures my dad was the only one who DID tell me to cut the crap. I had ignored him. I'm glad I woke up one day and realized he knew what he was talking about.

Funny how depression and lies we tell ourselves can become a self-fulfilling prophecy.

Date: 2008-02-15 08:13 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neanahe.livejournal.com
Yeah, I wound up in therapy, too. My dad asked me every week, "Are you getting better? Because this is costing me a lot of money." I wish I could say that it helped, but I think it helped convince me that I really was messed up and needed to keep going.

Date: 2008-02-15 03:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jenelycam.livejournal.com
With all the depression I faced and the crap that happened to me from day one, I never classified myself as emo. I do emo paintings. but I don't dress the part. (even though I love black) and I don't have my hair in "the style" or wear the pale face or color streaks. I also didn't get a lot of attention for it either. (Well when I was 3 & 4 I saw a psychiatrist).

I guess you don't have to be emo AND depressed, huh? ;P

BTW...camie says "hi" to your duckie!!

Date: 2008-02-15 08:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neanahe.livejournal.com
I still wear black, but only because of it's supposed "slimming" properties. For example, if I'm dressed in black and stand in front of a black wall, I look like a head and hands, and not much more. One has to guess what size the body between the head and the hands is, and hopefully they will give me the benefit of the doubt of being skinny. That's my hope, at least. ;P

I think your dark fairies are more Goth than Emo. They must be, because they don't annoy me in the least, and Emo fairies so would.

Date: 2008-02-15 08:36 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jenelycam.livejournal.com
That's a good idea...I should wear all black and just travel around with a black curtain behind me at all times. LOL

I go back and forth between the 2. Usually I classify them as goth, but I've started to say emo...because they've always got issues. :P

Date: 2008-02-15 04:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] the-ravyn.livejournal.com
Heh, I wasn't so much emo as I was the angry, get-out-of-my-face, don't-need-anybody, screw-love-and-all-that-bullcrap kind of kid.  It took a similiar kick to the head to get me out of that cycle as well.

Date: 2008-02-15 08:20 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neanahe.livejournal.com
You would have probably hung out with the Headbanger kids at my school, then. The boyfriend who dumped me was one of those. We crossed the rigid cliques to date; how Romeo and Juliet of us. Alas, like star-crossed lovers in general, we were doomed.

*sigh*

Date: 2008-02-15 08:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] the-ravyn.livejournal.com
Very perceptive, you are correct.  :)

Date: 2008-02-15 08:40 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] neanahe.livejournal.com
Funny how much those cliques meant to everyone at the time. I was amazed that as soon as high school was over, they suddenly meant nothing. I would run into people at college who would have never spoken to me in the 11th grade, and they would greet me like we were best friends.

They do mean something still, I think. I can usually peg what clique someone hung out with in HS, and I've noticed some trends. If they were in an outcast group - any outcast group at all (heads, nerds, waivers, band fags, drama queers, etc.) - I tend to like them as adults. If they were part of the "in" crowd (jocks and popular kids), I often (not always) tend ot find them still to be vacuous and shallow. I dunno, maybe I still carry a grudge or two.

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