Blog

  • Imaginary Friend

    We have a card deck of conversation starters for kids that we sometimes use when we sit down to dinner. Last night, one of the questions was about having an imaginary friend. It was something I hadn’t thought about in a while.

    Yes, I had an imaginary friend when I was a kid. No, they weren’t like a wise talking animal or cool creature I made up with my mind that popped up occasionally. As I explained to my kids last night that having an imaginary friend was a pretty normal thing, I also had to think that my particular imaginary friend was not normal.

    You see, my imaginary friend was me. Not like a cute thing where I was just really good at working things out with myself. I imagined a literal, tiny version of myself that lived inside my head. When I needed to talk to them, I would tilt my head and catch them out of my ear in my hand. We’d have a little chat and then I’d gently bring them back up to my ear so they could go back into my brain.

    Occasionally, I would even just let little tiny me take over and dissociate from my own life. It was our little secret. Normally when I did “take them out” of my head, I would do it in the bathroom because that way I wouldn’t get caught. I didn’t know why getting caught was bad, but it definitely seemed like something that I didn’t want to happen.

    Now I don’t remember exactly how old I was when I had this friend. Probably older than most kids with imaginary friends, somewhere between 6 and 10. But I CAN tell you that it was definitely well before the movie Being John Malkovich came out. When I saw that movie, I felt oddly seen.

    So yeah, now you know about my imaginary friend… me.

  • Hair

    Hair can signal so many things. Most of my life, I had long hair like I was supposed to being raised as a girl. I was relatively tomboy-esque as a kid, but I still wanted to keep my long hair. As a young adult, I would often grow my hair out long and then chop it short. I was never fully satisfied with it. When I came out as bi, I cut my hair short again. I am in a straight-passing marriage, and I wanted a signal that I also belonged to the queer community. Hair seemed like the easiest way to do that. I started with an undercut and then my hair started getting shorter and shorter. Eventually I realized I’m also nonbinary. I’m not a stickler about pronouns. I don’t really care what pronouns anyone uses for me. If you ask me or I have to type it into a field, I’ll use they/them. But if someone calls me she or he I’m not bothered. I don’t really talk about my gender very much because I mostly feel like genderless blob which is hard to describe. I do dress/style pretty androgynously, which I think some people catch on to more than others. However, I’m starting to grow my hair back out. I miss the simplicity of a bun or whatever when I can’t be bothered to wash it. And as much as I want to be proud of my body, it’s hard to get past a lifetime of being told what the ideal body looks like, and look… I know I have a hump. I want to cover it with my hair, ok? BUT then I wonder… how will people know I belong in the queer community? How will they know I’m nonbinary if I have longer hair again? Then I tell myself it doesn’t matter because who cares if they know so long as I know? Also body presentation does not equal gender. But THEN I’m like… but I WANT them know. And I don’t want to tell them. And then my brain backfires and I give up on this argument with myself.

    Anyway, just something I’m struggling with right now. Never thought hair could be something I think about so much.

  • Dreams from the Past and Present Part 1

    This is from my dream journal, dated 5/2/2008:

    I dreamt that I was dead, but somehow still slightly alive. I knew I was dead, but I still got on the internet to talk to Sarah. I had to go somewhere but I don’t remember exactly what happened except that Adrienne gave me a big chocolate chip cookie. I remember being in the laundry room. Sarah said I made her stay up so she could talk to me online and I admitted to her that I didn’t want to go to sleep because I was scared that I would start decomposing since I was dead. I was really afraid to go to sleep because I didn’t know what was going to happen. I was afraid I wouldn’t wake up or that when I woke up I would be decomposing. Something else happened, but I don’t remember what it was.

    Dream from last night, 5/28/2025

    I don’t remember how it started, but I was in some kind of hotel suite, and the curtains were closed so it was very dark. I went into the bathroom and turned on the lights, and they were blindingly bright at first. I started to take things out of the drawers in the bathroom, and when I looked at the counter, my own decapitated head was laying on it. The neck was not cut cleanly, but messily hacked. However, the head was still alive. I leaned over and gave myself a kiss. Then I heard someone entering the hotel room and started freaking out about the fact that I had a severed head in the bathroom.

    And that’s all I remember.

    So… something in my subconscious must need to process the reminder of my own mortality every once in a while I guess. The head this is a pretty weird visual to have going on in my mind now though…

  • Sorority Sister

    If you knew me now, you might be surprised to find out that I rushed for a sorority when I went to college. I didn’t know anyone going to my college, and I guess I thought this would be a good way to find friends.

    Mistakes I made:

    1. Not using professional headshots. Yes, you have to submit headshots when you are rushing for sororities. Mine was just taken in my living room. And I had pig tails in it, lol.
    2. Not being socially capable. When you rush for a sorority, you go from house to house and have to talk to a million people you don’t know. It’s horrifying.
    3. Not being pretty/skinny. I was overlooked over by most of the sororities due to this horrible mistake.
    4. Settling. The only sorority I got into was the one that was desperate for members because no one wanted to be in it. Probably where I fit in the best if I’m being honest, but I didn’t have to join since I didn’t really connect anywhere.
    5. Forgetting to be rich. I spent one semester in a sorority and my bank account went to literally zero. I was not getting anything out of it except a lot of pink shirts.
    6. MOST IMPORTANTLY: Not realizing I wasn’t even a GIRL. I never felt fully like I belonged with the girls, but I never considered being a boy. Back then, those were the only options I could comprehend, so I assumed I was a girl. Sororities are inherently quite girly. I not only didn’t fit in with the nerd sorority I landed in, I would have fit in even less with the prettier/girlier versions.

    A couple things made the experience worth it though:

    1. Realizing I didn’t have to pay a million dollars to be part of a group of people I didn’t have anything in common with.
    2. I met some girls in the dorms during rush week that I ended really connecting with. They went into different sororities, but I hung out with them a lot during freshman year before they went to live with the girlies.

    So… why did I think sorority life was for me? I truly have no idea. I was “initiated” in a weird secret ceremony. And then I quit after one semester. It’s not that the people in the sorority were bad people, they were actually very nice. It was more just that, as much as I was used to contorting myself to fit specific molds I thought I was supposed to fill, I couldn’t quite make it work in that particular environment (and more importantly, I went broke trying).

  • Art!

    In elementary school, we had to recreate the same picture in 4 ways – photograph, realistic, abstract and non-objective. I asked the art teacher what “non-objective” meant, and she said something along the lines of “you know, like parts in different places.” And so…

  • Algebraic Formula for Panic Attacks

    It was high school algebra, and I was sitting silently in my seat. I started to feel a familiar feeling that sometimes crept up on me and made me feel sick or like I was going to explode and die. By this point, I knew this feeling wasn’t normal. It was something I had grown up with, but not something my family understood. My parents didn’t know what panic attacks were. My brothers thought I was being overly dramatic. Hysterical even! 

    I knew this was another thing about me to hide. This particular day, I felt my breathing tighten and I started sweating in my seat, but I just looked straight ahead, and I vividly remember thinking these thoughts while I stared into the head of the person sitting in the desk in front of me.

    – something is very wrong with me.

    – I am not normal.

    – no one else is feeling like this.

    – look at this person in front of me, just sitting there, like a normal person, not about to die like I am.

    – Why do they get to just think normal thoughts?

    – No one knows I’m like this.

    – why am I like this?

    – why am I like this?

    – WHY AM I LIKE THIS?

    The only thing that helped was physically moving, but unfortunately we were not allowed to just get up and walk out of class so we could roam the halls trying to get our breath back into our bodies. Instead I sat there and held it in, preferring to risk spontaneously combusting than to try to make anyone understand that there was something seriously wrong with me. I clenched and unclenched my fists. I tried to breathe, but not too loudly. I told myself I wasn’t going to throw up even though I was definitely going to throw up. 

    Eventually the feeling faded or the class ended or maybe I did die and this is just a different life I stepped into. Maybe every time I had a panic attack, I died and started again.

    When they happened at home, my mom used to walk with me. I would tell her I couldn’t breathe. And she would say I definitely could breathe, because I needed to breathe to tell her I couldn’t breathe. Which would make me feel one atomic sub particle better. She would take me outside for fresh air and because I thought I was going to throw up every single time, so being outside felt better just in case. We would walk in circles in the front yard and she would talk to me about random things to help distract me. I would tell her “I can’t, I can’t, I can’t.” And she would say “you can, you can, you can.” She was my little blue engine that carried me over the hill.

    When I was 17, I finally saw my first therapist. I don’t remember what event actually prompted the first visit. I just remember the relief at finally understanding what the actual fuck was wrong with me. Oh, panic attacks. Yeah, that’s a thing. Not a crazy person thing, just a normal thing that happens to some people. It was also something I could learn coping mechanisms for and there was medication I could take when the coping mechanisms didn’t work. 

    I’ve had panic attacks for as long as I can remember, and at 17 I found out what they were. I tried hypnotherapy, and while I don’t think I’m the type of person who can be hypnotized (panic is partly about control), I did learn a lot from that. If you’ve never had hypnotherapy, it often starts with walking down a set of stairs and to a door and through the door is a happy place. My happy place was walking the trail near our house with my mother. 

    When I hit my 30s, my panic attacks mostly receded. Now they are pretty rare, though I still have anxiety and excessive intrusive thoughts and the occasional melancholy. When I do start to feel pressure build, I still think about that trail and my mom talking me down. When I get into full blown anxiety, she’s the one I call crying because I know her soothing will bring me back to earth. Honestly, without my mom I’m not sure I would have made it through high school.

  • Daily Writing Prompt 3/13/25

    Daily writing prompt
    What movies or TV series have you watched more than 5 times?

    I don’t rewatch a lot of things, but there are a few. I’ll try to name them in the chronological order of my obsession…

    1. Buffy the Vampire Slayer: Did I have a crush on Buffy or did I want to be a Buffy? Who’s to say!
    2. Gilmore Girls: This is a comfort show for me, though my interpretations of Rorie’s love interests have changed over time (I was hardcore Jess/Rorie forever when the show came out, but in later years realized that was uh… not healthy to say the least?) Ultimately, none of them are good enough for her, let’s be honest.
    3. Battlestar Galactica: Did I have a crush on Starbuck or did I want to be Starbuck? Recurring theme…
    4. Heartstopper: Severe “Heartstopper Syndrome” sufferer. I love them so so much. The show makes me feel hope and loss at the same time. It truly helped me come out even as a monogamous person in a straight-passing happy marriage.

    It’s weird that I can’t think of any movies… probably stuff from when I was a kid like Dumb and Dumber or something… Oh… Biodome. For some reason, I watched that movie like a million times.

    Ok, that’s all I can think of, bye bye.

  • Fart Clouds and Mind Reading

    As a child, I internalized so much that I was often afraid that others were able to see me internally as well. Not realizing that most people are mostly thinking about themselves, I thought that everyone was looking at me and seeing the real me peeking out. As much as I tried to blend in, I knew that somehow people could see how much of a freak I really was, that something was inherently wrong with me and it was only a matter of time before it showed up in embarrassing ways.

    One of the things I was really really afraid of was accidentally farting in public. I imagined that there were other kids walking around in the world who would be able to know I farted. In my head they could see fart clouds in the air like water that changes color when someone pees in the pool (is that a real thing by the way? I remember it being such a big threat as a kid, but I never saw it in action). I think I might have held my butt closed so tight to avoid the potential of farting that I made my guts messed up. I’m still dealing with gut issues to this day! And if I thought farting was bad, God forbid I ever had to poop when I was anywhere but in my own home (this is still an issue for me as an grown-ass adult who knows everyone poops). Anyway, how these other children acquired this fart-detecting superpower, I did not know, but there was something in me that truly believed it was there.

    Aside from sensing farts, I also constantly worried about people reading my mind. I tried so hard to fit in, but I knew inside I was different. And I knew that eventually someone was going to figure that out, perhaps through some good old mind reading. Sometimes, I even thought that literally everyone else could read minds except for me. Like they all just knew what everyone was thinking all the time and communicated secretly with each other, but for some reason I got left out of that circle. Sometimes I thought that the whole world was set up just to embarrass me. Imagine how vindicated I felt when The Truman Show came out. I literally thought maybe that was my life as a child! Now what was so interesting about me that everyone needed to watch me? I couldn’t quite figure that out, but it was obviously some humanity cue that I was missing. I felt things so deeply that others were able to brush off.

    So at certain point I convinced myself that at lease some people were capable of reading my mind. Again, this would be my peers. I did not concern myself with adults at the time for some reason, but I knew there were kids out there just taking my thoughts and turning them into laughs. Those JERKS! Sometimes, just walking around school, I would loudly think to myself “If you are reading my mind right now, STOP!” As though if they knew that I knew it was happening, it would prevent it.

    Where did this type of anxiety come from? Absolutely no idea, but it haunted me for a long time. Sometimes I still think someone might be reading my mind, particularly if a random inappropriate thought pops into my head for a second. I’ll think “I can’t think that, someone will know!” And push it away.

    Anyway, anyone else have this kind of paranoia as a child? No? Just me? Cool. 🙂

  • Daily Writing Prompt 3/4/25

    Daily writing prompt
    You’re writing your autobiography. What’s your opening sentence?

    You can never truly know a person except yourself, and even then, it’s pretty fucking hard.

  • Boobs

    This is a biography of my boobs as remembered by me. By society’s standards, the most important part of me, and so should go first as a matter of priority.

    When I was in elementary school, I was the first person in my class to have to wear a bra. Up until that point, my general disposition was blend into the background like I don’t exist. That actually still would have been my preference, except now there were two stupid bumps sticking out of that background which were difficult for others not to notice. I hated them. I hated that they made me a focal point when I did nothing to encourage them to be there. I hated how sometimes I would feel the neckline on my shirt slide far enough down my shoulder that my bra strap would show. I mostly hated that no one else had to worry about this yet so I didn’t have anyone to talk to about it. Paradoxically, I even hated it when one boy said I was “flat-chested,” when I was LITERALLY the only kid in the class who, in fact, was not flat chested. It was like being seen for your most obvious flaw, but then being told it wasn’t a part of you. I felt so conflicted about being offended by that taunt, because I would have given anything at that moment to be flat-chested. Mostly, I was lonely.

    When I got to middle school, I mostly wore loose t-shirts, but I also wore smaller tops from the Limited Too because that was what all my friends were into. I wasn’t into anything fashion related, so I would just buy the same shirts they did, but they looked different on me.  I was a still relatively innocent sixth grade, but boys decided I knew what “hand jobs” or “blow jobs” were. Because I had boobs already, I guess my body was meant to be put to use. Upon finding out I didn’t know, they would whisper the definitions to me in the middle of science class. I wouldn’t tell anyone else this information because my friends would be scandalized. I still felt very lonely.

    By the end of middle school, other girls had boobs too, to my desperate relief. But mine were still something different than most of them. I couldn’t buy cute little bras. Mine were more like real mom bras with thick straps and stiff wires. By this point I had seen other boobs somewhere or another and knew that mine were incorrect. I fretted about the size of nipples, thinking they were going overtake my entire body. Again, I never told anyone about these fears because my friends all had “normal” boobs and, presumably, cute little nipples.

    In high school, I knew I should be proud of my boobs. They were something to be desired, something that got attention. Like the time a boy romantically yelled out “BIG FUCKING TITTIES” at me from across the school parking lot. Or the time I was hot and took off my sweatshirt and a boy in my theater class said “Oh yeah, I forgot *Aninamous* has huge boobs.” And then three other boys turned to look at them, and one said “she should go outside” because it was raining that day and my shirt was white.

    I tried to play it cool, but I still hated them. I was so, so ashamed of them. I hated when anyone looked at them and the rest of me disappeared. 

    One day near the end of high school, I mumbled something in a class about being cold and the teacher said loudly to me “maybe you should cover your chest, if you know what I mean.” I was wearing a v-neck t-shirt, but all she was seeing was cleavage I guess. It drew attention to me. To them. Again. And I froze, because I didn’t know how to respond. I rarely talked in class, so I didn’t have a relationship with any of my teachers. This was probably the first thing she’d ever said directly me to me and I was completely taken aback. I sat through the rest of class feeling ashamed and alone and holding back tears.

    By college, I had more or less figured out how to minimize my boob display and keep them tucked away for special occasions. Plus there were a lot more people with boobs even bigger than mine, some that really were proud of them, who felt no shame in accentuating them. I was happy to cede all the gazes to them so I could vanish directly into the ground.

    At my first post-college job, I worked with men in higher level positions who would talk directly to my chest. And not just mine, but all the young women who worked there. I only made it there for a few months before quitting.

    After that, I tried to just ignore my boobs for years, doing my best to hide them away. And then I had a baby. And my boobs became a tool to keep another human alive. This is a precious, miraculous thing that our bodies are able to do. But it also hurts. Constantly. I pumped milk in little closets at work. I pumped milk in my car driving to meetings. And then the daycare providers told me it wasn’t enough. It’s not enough. It’s never enough. I pumped and nursed and pumped and that was my life for 6 months after each of my babies were born. As much as it hurt, I can say, that moment when your milk lets down and really starts to flow is one of the best feelings in the world. It must release some powerful drugs in your brain, because sometimes I still crave that feeling even though I remember all the mastitis and cracked nipples.

    Now my boobs are used up has-beens. I can appreciate what they’ve done for me, but I wish I could hide them away. I find them distracting and annoying and a lot to carry around. And every 28 days or so they ache annoyingly. Still, I’m trying to do better at loving my body for what it does, not what’s expected of it by other people. Radical kindness, even to my boobs I guess.