Someone
asked me once what it’s like to be me.
I’m
kidding. Who asks something like that? I actually read it in a book.
In context, it was about how we often jump to conclusions about
people without really understanding what they’re going through, and
if we would just listen, we might not be so upset about our
differences.
I
thought this was a novel idea. Why didn’t anyone care about what
it’s like to be me? Surely if they did, they would stop labeling me
as a weirdo.
I
could tell you what it’s like to be me. I could go into the long
explanation. I have many labels I associate with now, although none
is strictly accurate. The short story, however, is that I think I’m
misunderstood. I can only say that though because everyone is
misunderstood. According to an image I surreptitiously stole from the
internet this morning, Everyone is fighting a battle I know nothing
about. That is to say, humans are really bad at understanding each
other, even though we all face pretty much the same thing.
“But
you couldn’t possibly understand me! You haven’t been through
what I’ve been through!”
Seriously.
Human beings have a limited range of emotions. Even if I haven’t
been through what you’ve been through, I might be able to get how
you’re feeling.
But I
didn’t come here to demean your feelings. I personally think that
feelings are irritating and misleading, but they’re still real.
What I did come to talk about is plastic.
Now,
plastic, as a substance, is dangerous to the environment. Plastic is
not biodegradable, so it fills up our landfills and kills wildlife.
It is also tough, so it kills animals and accumulates in the great
Pacific garbage patch. It also uses up valuable petroleum, which
drives up gas prices. Plastic has its uses, and they are limited. In
general, plastic is bad.
Why
on earth would we want plastic in our souls then?
See
what I did there?
No?
Okay,
I’ll explain.
People
are plastic. As in, we are fake. Our whole lives are used up
pretending to do things we’d rather not do, or pretending we don’t
enjoy stuff we actually like, or pretending we like stuff that we
actually despise. Sometimes the overall fakeness of it all is
overwhelming, and we’re stuck wondering if there’s actually
anything real or worthwhile in this world.
But
worse than this is that, even if we realize that we are plastic, we
are apathetic. We are comfortable and, while not exactly satisfied,
justified in our own minds. We have to be what we are to survive. We
have to look out for number one. We have to spend our days doing what
is expected of us by ourselves and by society. What other meaning is
there to life?
Aside
from these distinctly negative associations, it is actually necessary
for us to pretend to be people we aren’t. For example, most of us
are not law-abiding citizens. We’re just pretending to be. We all
have the capacity to break the laws, but due to personal and social
constraints, we pretend we would never do those bad things. In this
case, it’s okay to be plastic and pretend to be something you might
not actually be.
In
other instances, however, this can cause problems. See, when we
pretend that we have it all together even though we don’t, we make
ourselves invulnerable to assistance, and in turn, we view those who
reveal they need help as illogical, needy, or sinful.
But
somehow I can't admit I need help because I have to keep pretending
to be strong, smart, and in control while being funny, friendly, and
sincere. But this leaves me stuck in a paradox between the identity
that I want to have and the identity that I have to have in order to
achieve my goals. I don’t know how to be all those things without
compromising who I really am. This is in part because I don’t know
who I really am. I don’t know if any of us knows who we really are.
I do
know that we’re complicated. I’ve seen movies about high school
cliques where you can identify most of what a person is by which
group they associate with.
I was
home schooled. I was never labeled as a part of any particular group.
I was never told I couldn’t like something because it didn’t suit
my type. I was allowed to like punk rock, ballet, gardening, and
video games. It was like being in kindergarten, except I was actually
good at the stuff I tried.
I
admit, though, that since I’ve never been to an actual high school,
there is a distinct possibility that I am misunderstanding the social
structure. All I know is that I don’t fit in. People can label me,
but I always deviate from the expected. But everyone does that, even
if only a little.
Despite
this, you won’t hear me say that we’re all the same. We’re not
all the same. If we’re all the same, then what’s the point of
being a deviant? What I am saying, though, is that we all have
similarities in our core. There are core differences as well, and
certainly an abundance of shallow differences, but there is something
about being human that no one who claims that label can avoid.
That’s
why I’m looking into proof that one or both of my parents have
supernatural DNA. I was thinking elvish for a time, but perhaps
dragon is more my species type.
Similar
to a dragon, I am a hoarder, I like to live alone and will guard my
privacy with fire when necessary. I’m clever and popular, but
everyone’s just a bit afraid of me. Except my mother. Dangit,
mother. How am I supposed to create a broad sweeping generalization
if you’re a deviant???
I’m
also draconic due to the fact that I’ve been accused of not
existing.
Not
as in, I’m an apparition or a figment of thousands of people’s
imagination. More as in, I don’t experience what most people call
normal, and people don’t believe that’s possible.
I’m
talking about sex. For the record (intense stressful moment as I
brace for objections), I label myself as asexual. Not like the
plants. Unfortunately, my attempts to reproduce by budding have all
ended in failure. As in, I don’t want to have sex. I think sex is
stupid. I don’t get why people want it. You can object all you
want, but if you don’t believe me, you can stop reading. It’s
okay. You are fully entitled to your own opinion. Even if it’s
wrong.
I
think this is one of the most misunderstood things about me. You
might find it easy to see why. Unless, of course, you’ve never seen
me flirting, but trust me, that adds a whole level of confusion that
most people aren’t prepared to deal with. People ask me, what’s
normal? Is it okay to feel like this?
If
you were a computer, I’d tell you that there’s nothing in the
original installation that can kill you. But humans and dragons are
not computers.
I
pretend I’m not asexual though. Especially to people who’ve known
me all my life. It’s hard to accept that other people change. I
used to be an albeit weird teenager with reasonably normal desire for
relationships, and since no one expected anything different, hearing
that I am something unexpected is hard to accept. So it is with
everyone who defies expectations.
Expectations
are cruel. They can help uphold standards. They can also be crushing.
For me, at least, I hate going back to where I used to live because
the expectations of people who knew me are overwhelming. I can’t be
everything you were expecting me to be. You know that, but you’re
still disappointed. I’m still disappointed. This is because I have
just as much plastic in me as everyone else. I’m just as apathetic
as everyone else. I hate it, but not enough to change.
Is
this what it means to be human?
Are
we destined to lose to the plastic?
Will
we always just love that which is meaningless and hate what could
change us?
Everyone
is fighting a battle, but it’s not always a battle against the
plastic.
Sometimes
the plastic is too much. Sometimes we have the time to battle our own
lack of change, our apathy, and our superficiality. Sometimes,
however, we battle to survive. We battle to find our identity. We
battle to be understood. We battle to be valued. We fight through
days and months and years of invisible battles.
She
asked me one day if I even really cared. I was rebelling against the
plastic, so I said what she had been hoping I wouldn’t admit: I
didn’t care. I couldn’t. I was too worn out to even consider
fighting the truth anymore. It was a cruel truth, and not one that I
wanted her to know. I wanted to care. But sometimes you just can’t
fight anymore.
I was
dying, but all of a sudden, the plastic seemed stupid. Why do we
waste so much time doing that which doesn’t matter?
“Why
didn’t you ever tell me?” She asked.
Because
what can you say in the face of all that brokenness?
“How
can you possibly understand?”
“Because
I’m that broken too” she whispered.
We’re
all that broken. No one can possibly understand how broken we are.
Except that
we’re
all that broken.
What’s
it like to be me?
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