Wednesday, July 26, 2017

Advice to Me

I don't think I planned on that one summer being the launch point for my adult life. Who knew that first job my aunt got me the week after my 18th birthday would keep coming back to me as it has? I had no interest in working as a disability aide, and I guess I still don't, but this is what I find myself doing. I didn't realize disability is so prevalent or that it can pop up anywhere.

I don't think I'm qualified to give “advice to 20 somethings” as is a popular trend floating around blogs these days. I have stories, of course, but what I take away from them is not what you might need. Life tends to keep going in a direction you aren't quite sure you like. I don't know why there's so much disability and violence in life. I guess I was surprised to find it in me too.

I'd give advice to my former self, but even I don't know the end of this story. Life isn't an Adventure in Odyssey; you can't usually make a half hour show with exposition, climax, and resolution. You know in a book it'll eventually be alright, because there's always an ending. Life isn't like that. I can't say for sure which parts will factor into the climax and which parts are just needless exposition.

Someone slapped me in the face yesterday (figuratively), telling me that no matter what my circumstances, I don't have to be miserable. I guess that's true, in a sense. Misery is a state of mind as much as it is a sort of thing that just falls on you, or perhaps that you fall into. I don't say this to downplay mental illness. If you don't know, I have depression and anxiety. People joke that “falling in love” is sort of a misnomer because you don't fall in love the same way you fall into a hole. But you fall into depression similarly to how you fall in a hole; you might be walking along not worrying too much about where you're going and suddenly you're 6 feet under and have no way to get out. Is it possible to not be miserable at the bottom of this hole though? I think that's where the metaphor falls apart. Depression isn't something you can see, like a hole. It's so intangible there isn't usually a clear direction you need to go. That's not to say I have to stay depressed, just that it's not really clear how to not be depressed.

I don't know that I have advice for my former self. That 18 year old girl that spent 4 hours a day watching a low-functioning 10 year old alternately tremble and drool in some ways is a lifetime away. That girl didn't have insomnia, a college degree, close friends, artistic aspirations, concrete plans, a political agenda, a liberal arts perspective, or a sexual orientation. She'd never had to pay bills, manage a budget, repair a car, stay up late studying, or weave through the intricacies of trying to date and not date at the same time. She'd also never really been on the internet. I wonder if the current me would do things differently if put back in that place. If she'd still stock up on snacks in her trunk and spend weekends thinking about doing something besides driving and playing freecell. But no matter how much I wonder, the truth is that I'm never going back.


I think that's one thing I would tell myself. I mean, I'd tell me “you're asexual. It's cool.” But I would also say that it's not worth having all those regrets. Of course, I believe in living life in such a way that I won't have regrets, but sometimes everyone does things that shouldn't have been done. But you can't undo them. I think I'd also tell myself that agnosticism isn't for me.

Maybe I'd tell myself to get as much training on disability as possible. How was I to know that abnormal psychology exists everywhere (to the point that it's not really abnormal)? But that field of knowledge is vast and unpredictable. I think one could study for a thousand years and not really understand it. I don't even understand my own depression and anxiety despite living with it every day.


But you know, 18 year old me knew something that I may have forgotten. She used to dream of a day when disability would be no more. There would be a day when that trembling, drooling child would no longer be autistic. He would have words and be able to walk and run and read and sing and create without assistance. He would be free. And I think that it's sometimes easy to stay in a place where disability is crippling and seems like it'll last forever and that there will never be any hope of freedom from it. But I wonder if this isn't just a cry for redemption?