Performing for Love

Survival Mode
Performing for Love
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CHILDHOOD

If Disney Channel taught me anything growing up, it’s that I knew to anticipate my parent’s conflation of their previously failed and now second chance at a career or dream manifesting its way into my own life and I would certainly have to dramatically break free. All of those “it’s not my dream, dad, it’s yours” Zac Efron bullshit? Ya. 

So if anyone wants to give me shit for enjoying the art of “performance”, please direct your attention to the talent show at Mary H. Matula Elementary school when I was in third grade where I sang “The Star Spangled Banner” in a fuzzy blue sweater and red velvet skirt, both from Limited Too. Beginning the performance in dedication to my grandfather, a 3 time war veteran whose career for the U.S. Army involves testifying to congress and intelligence briefings in the Pentagon. Accompanied by my grandmother, whose pianist and organ skills were utilized at virtually every religious congregation in the area as well as providing the orchestral production to the local theatre during musicals. Obviously, I fucking won. I’ve known how to emotionally manipulate a crowd my entire life. I think we can all agree that wasn’t MY idea, either. I had wanted to learn the dance from the end of The Lizzie McGuire movie that Hilary and Haylie Duff performed with my best friend Shelby but nooooooo, that wasn’t “talent show material”. 

So sit back, keep your arms and legs inside the ride at all times, strap in, and enjoy the ride of this shit show. 

Back to parents using their children to live vicariously through–Let’s consider “sports” as a whole. How many parents, my own included, view sports as an “investment” instead of a healthy outlet for the natural human behavior of “competition”. Fuck “functional fitness” as a concept in childhood. 

Instead, we convince ourselves that children are just naturally predisposed to need so much fucking outlets for their aggression, focus, and drive that they WANT to be screamed at for 3 hours a day, 6 days a week in the pseudo-military, physique development training that is competitive gymnastics. I grew up in the fucking 90’s, too. My parents were riding HARD on that Olympics Team USA dream. Simone Biles was asked why she didn’t smile and she said “smiling doesn’t win gold medals” and people were like “oh that’s adorable, how cute” then a few months later we found out she’d been sexually molested by her trainer, along with hundreds of other athletes, for YEARS.

Gymnastics literally operates as a way to funnel children, but especially young women, out of the “general populace” and into excessive athletic competitions that essentially require you to use performance to justify abuse. We’re not like “oh shit, maybe this is a new method of child labor. There’s no way this is healthy.” Instead, we just sit there and go “Yuuuuuppp. Abuse and performing for love is the norm. It’ll be worth it. Gotta sacrifice everything if you actually want it”–without asking why the fuck we’re requiring children (and their parents) to realize you’re only THAT driven if you don’t have other outlets for creative and artistic expression as well as emotional catharcism. 

Now, I bring this up because as I approach my 30’s, and the unsolicited advice from older men on Seeking Arrangements remind me that “my looks won’t last forever” (no shit, dude… that’s when I’ll rely more heavily on my MULTIPLE STEM DEGREES), I have hit a rather unfortunate realization that having once run 85 miles a week, and playing multiple sports a season for YEARS, and the sheer amount and brutality of CONTACT sports, including gymnastics and football, does not bode well for my long-term physical health in a for-profit healthcare system. I have put my body through HELL. I will likely need a double hip replacement before I’m even 40. Can’t wait. 

Before quarantine, I was under the impression that I had a great body because of all the workouts. Now, after ~a year of limited physical activity (save yoga), I’ve realized it’s the cPTSD that keeps me in a state of hypervigilance and in constant fight or flight mode 24/7. Yippee! 

… Ya’ll can laugh but I’d prefer to be transparent simply because of the unrealistic standards for women’s bodies in the media, the exploitation of the beauty (and plastic surgery) industries capitalizing off women’s insecurities without requiring anything even remotely resembling mental health care and utterly lacking consumer protections, and the desire for people in the USA to get a “quick fix” for everything, thinking “treatment” of various forms will be a “solution” (particularly for such insecurities). 

Back to my childhood—

Let’s look at a few key moments in sporting, performance, and healthcare history that *likely* impacted the way I view the world:

When I was in kindergarten, I broke my foot for the first time by being pushed out into the fireman’s pole area on the playground, falling straight down (without holding onto the pole), and landing “Indian-style” (a VERY outdated term. Criss cross applesauce, crosslegged, etc) on the ground. I cried, and despite only being in kindergarten, learned a difficult life lesson which is that women’s pain will constantly be undermined and overlooked under the assumption they are being “dramatic” (a common trope in medicine, even). My teacher would not even let me call my mom. I had broken 3 bones and had to wait for the end of the school day. 

Once in gymnastics, before I quit because I would literally come home crying, hated my coaches, and begged my mom to let me stop (I loved the workouts, just not the “ALL COMPETITION MODE ALL THE TIME”), I ran full speed at a vault, just failed to jump on the springboard, and completely annihilated myself at full speed. Could’ve easily broken a rib, had the wind knocked out of me, tried to go hug my mom who was seated with the other parents next to the runway, and instead got pushed back onto it, BY MY OWN MOTHER WHOSE COMFORT I WAS SEEKING, because “you’re gonna get DQ’ed”.

A few years later, on the first day of a 4 day horse competition at a location called “Fair Hill”–which hosts huge overnight eventing shows–one of the horses I was walking STOMPED on my foot. I believe (if I remember correctly) that this was not the same foot I had already broken. Nope! The opposite one. Luckily, I broke a few bones on this side too–even things out a little neurologically, ya know. Did my mom believe me? Nope. Not at all. I was told to “suck it up” because people were depending on me. 

The conflation of sports with financial success, the ability to skirt capitalism and corporate working environments, and utilizing sports as a way of paying for what would otherwise be an unaffordable and inaccessible college is a dangerous game for children. Children are not seen as a decision brought into this world by two (sometimes more) loving parents who just want to provide a human with love and care. 

Children themselves become investments. Property.

By the time middle school even came around, my parents were fucked. To nobody’s fault but their own. They had raised me to be a soldier. I performed for love and the necessity to compete ALL THE TIME and to be the best, or at least your best, ALL THE TIME was solidified. Who could blame them, though? I was good at everything. They were just funneling outlets for it to me left and right. It probably had something to do with my own creative-as-fuck mom stayed at home, raised me on a farm, and then I had the musculoskeletal development through gymnastics. 

So what is the point that I’m getting at? I’m not “mad” at my parents. My sharing these stories is never with the intention of punishing them (at least not for my mom. Truthfully… I do not give a flying fuck about my biological father’s feelings.) It is, however, to reflect on the reality of the societal conditions I was raised in. Conditions that were and remain actively encouraged within the capitalist framework of our society with little to no well organized and developed social support programs. 

I have to actively AVOID competition now. I had to LEARN how to empathize. 

And when you’re raised by parents and BOTH of them were raised by family serving in World War II, one having a U.S. Army career and the other being NYPD law enforcement, you don’t really get a “soft” childhood. You get taught to be tough. Arguably, you’re doing the bare minimum of teaching–helping your children survive. 

You teach them to excel. To win. As is the only acceptable outcome in the USA–particularly backed by generations of teachings regarding dominance in all forms–land, sea, space, olympic.

And I undeniably rose to the challenge. 

But at what cost? 

For years my competitive drive was flaunted. It was rewarded, positive reinforcement’s finest. I kept winning, at everything. I’d switch into and pick up a new sport as I got bored, or competition was limited in the other outlets. In truth, I was probably a bit of a terror. I KNOW I wasn’t always the nicest teammate. Granted, I was there to work. To be respectful. To commit. To honour that commitment. To prove my worth with every practice, game, match, competition, whatever. 

And as long as I kept winning, my parents were doing something right. Their community success, their own value, resided in the way I “turned out”. Because fuck the concept of loving your children for whoever they actually are. For providing them enough emotional support, love, and quality time to actually be mentally balanced. They had to win, to earn, respect, love, and admiration at every step. They had to harness that drive, that conflict, that inner turmoil and channel it into competitive outlets because they had no control or ability to hold power within their home. 

Side note–My own biological father is so fucking delusional over who I am that he actually believes I didn’t want him to get married. I honestly could not give two shits if he is married or not. I simply did not care to invest in a relationship with a stepmom or step siblings when I had and wanted ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with him. I also just couldn’t afford to fly out to his wedding, when he chose “Hawaii” for “the convenience of HER children”, when I was in grad school and had a combined total of $2,000 to support myself for rent and food after my tuition was paid. I worked for my apartment complex, had an etsy, and STILL struggled but sure let’s make it clear you didn’t think about and don’t care if your own daughter attends your wedding then call her “unreasonable” and a “brat”. I have worked during every vacation I’ve been on, had free lodging, couch surfed, etc. so I could still travel, but how unaware of the reality do you have to be to label your daughter as “emotionally manipulative”, beginning in middle school, just because she doesn’t like or respect the person you are and makes that clear. 

For years I walked right past him, sitting glued to his computer screen or watching the same reruns of “A League of Our Own”, “Revenge of the Nerds” (which literally includes a rape scene he’d laugh at), and “The Sandlot” for hours when he came home from work, just to ran away ALL THE TIME. He literally never once realized I didn’t come back inside, or upstairs. He was nonexistent as a father for at least a decade of my life when I lived with him. He DID, however, show up to my sporting events. Ready to cheer me on and take all the credit for MY successes publicly. At my graduations, my friends have told me how he turned the conversation to himself, and to the many “sacrifices” he made for me over the years and how “proud” he was–while doing absolutely nothing to actually assist me in those achievements. Not even very basic or regular communication. It’s easy to sit there, cheering for and by someone when they’re winning. That isn’t what makes you a good parent. I do not need your applause. 

For years, I was the recipient of public endorsement after public endorsement, only to be criticized, to analyze and review my mistakes, to be punished behind the scenes. My perfectionism is the product of the environment I was raised in. An environment that was undeniably unhealthy, but even though I am now tasked with a life journey of remembering those moments, of relearning a way to be “healthy”, of figuring out how to finally be comfortable accepting help (and even being able to ask for it). Of not even having biological familial support for that because my parents had children to fill a gap in their lives and marriage and relationship without understanding or comprehending the world they were raising those children in. Without trying to understand them, or their world, because it contradicts their own.

Since excellence was expected, it quickly lost its glamour. Trophies don’t mean shit when you win one every weekend. National merit awards are weightless. Academic scholarships and college offers piled up. I was rewarded by society for pretending like my inner turmoil and unhappiness didn’t exist. For escaping and finding mental peace for everything that could keep me away from home. Competition gave me that. But why did I need it? 

I loved competing so much that I hated NOT competing my freshman year of college and set out determined to “actually” try (in track) so I could walk on to my collegiate team. I realized I had no interest in gymnastics again–my shoulder surgeries offered limited trust in the likelihood that I wouldn’t tear or break something again, but running was a feasible goal. After all, with enough time, anyone can systematically get better at it. It’s basic physiology, biomechanics. It’s cheap, free–you just lace up your shoes and go. It allowed me to reintegrate myself within the woods, exist in my natural state–free, moving, earthly. 

I went from partying 6 nights a week and drinking alcohol for the first time one year to working my way up to an easy 85 miles a week of SOLO distance training around Chapel Hill completely self-motivated. 

The endorphins kept me happy. My body was used to needing them in such high quantities after years of sports. Elle Woods was right–happy people don’t kill their husbands, or the other men who wrong them. They channel their frustration into physical performance and everything else just kind of melts away. 

So what do we do in the USA, when levels of anxiety and depression surpass The Great Depression? When long working hours and the necessity to be productive 24/7 are driving hard working individuals to their deaths and they’re convinced it makes them more valuable than others they look down on (so it feels “worth it”) because they perceive one’s circumstances and opportunities to be the same without awareness. When 25-35% of Americans are inactive, yet many more lack the space, resources, money, and safety to feel secure in exercise? Did you know that for women (and any other sexual assault survivors), it often feels safer to be heavier in weight. You may be catcalled less. You might command less attention if you float subtly as a wallflower. You feel safer, harder to kidnap.

Why have we created an environment, a society, a country where people have to have marathon endurance of energy, of mental strength, just to feel valued, seen, and heard within society? 

Why do we embrace an environment that makes you beg for worth, for love, for acceptance, and then wonder why it isn’t fulfilling? 

Why do we then ridicule, ostracize, and beat down those with moments of clarity–those who look around and question “why”. 

To what avail? 

Why do we exhaust their fuel tanks and then berate them for being empty? 

COLLEGIATE CAREER (15:25)

Part of the draw of sports was it offered my parents the opportunity to not have to pay for college. College got exorbitantly expensive. Both of my parents had scholarships, so they just anticipated that we would also and then they’d “figure out the rest”. They’d go on to take out loans (in our names), with money that never went to our own personal bank accounts, then set certain expectations for where and when our money would be given to us. 

I had to run track, because otherwise I was required to get a job. My parents never let me work in high school, outside of the summers, and I’ve discussed how the financial coercion allowed me to remain in more than one unhealthy relationship–the allure of presents I could never afford on my own was too appealing to pass up or break up with. 

Even the jobs I did get, my dad essentially forced me to take. I umpired beginning in middle school–his personal favorite, despite hating having to make the power calls, throwing adults out of 10U REC LEAGUE SOFTBALL GAMES WHEN I WAS 13 YEARS OLD. I hated bending over behind home plate as a crowd of boys from the ballpark watched behind me–clearly, awkwardly, and albeit somewhat innocently, fantasizing about me without connecting how physically uncomfortable I was inside. I didn’t really have a choice to care, though. I was expected to take the games (it was good money, there weren’t enough female umpires), I was going to be at the ballpark anyways (my dad was umping on other fields, we needed the money for all of our activities), and these were innocent boys who had childhood crushes on me–they weren’t expected to treat me with respect or fully abide by MY boundaries (a sentiment an unfortunate amount of men still embrace). 

In college, he genuinely thought I’d enjoy working at the local baseball stadium, dancing on the dugouts in between innings. I never enjoyed being forced to be an entertainer. Even if I was naturally good at it. I didn’t and shouldn’t have needed a second job for $7.25 minimum wage, when in reality he just wanted an excuse to be at that fucking ball field. I was standing on dugouts in short little khaki shorts, dancing to “Sweet Caroline” and “Cotton Eyed Joe”, plastering a glowing smile across my face, laughing on cue, and ignoring the sexually suggestive commentary of the washed up 40 year olds clinging to their love of baseball who would stand in the dugout so they could get the best view of my ass–all things women are trained to do our whole lives. My father universally thinks everyone seeks out the same power and limelight that he craves would come easy to him, and in doing so, he created a Frankenstein’s monster a la me, the eldest daughter. 

He no longer gets a choice in how or why or when I “perform” any longer. 

So fuck ‘im. 

Looking back, I find it hard, if not downright IMPOSSIBLE, to believe my biological father, a man who flaunts his intelligence, his financial prowess and awareness, and his ego, wouldn’t have been able to understand that, had he just divorced my mother when they stopped loving each other, we would’ve all gotten almost 100% of financial aid, because of her teacher salary, and I don’t really sympathize with anyone who uses the “but he paid for your college” trope because college was an expectation in my family and they specifically raised us knowing they would pay for it. I’m not going to apologize for being a national freak in high school and having the opportunity to literally go anywhere I wanted. 

In reality, my father prevented the divorce until he was ready to leave the community (and had a reason to physically move away) so he could control his public image to the best of his ability. He tells anybody that will listen these days how my mom cheated on him. Mind you, that very boss at that baseball stadium once asked me if he and my friend’s mom with giant fake boobs, perfect hair, and a Marilyn Monroe style body ever had an affair. My boss was the older sister of one of my brother’s baseball teammates almost his ENTIRE life. The woman she referenced had overlapped on almost every team with my brother. My dad can go fuck himself about my mom being the reason the marriage didn’t work.

He also tells people I “faked my PTSD and car accident for attention”, which is conveniently his way of discrediting the validity of my claims lest they ever negatively impact him. 

Women who are “hysterical” have historically been quite easy to keep submissive, subservient, quiet. 

I have no interest in ever being one of them. 

My parents never visited my siblings or I at school, outside of SAVE the rare holiday, or a sporting event. There were no “surprise” visits, or even care packages. 

My brother, the eldest, went to the University of South Carolina and walked onto their baseball program, the same program that went back-to-back-to-back College World Series finals. They won back-to-back national championship titles. Half of his teammates were drafted into the MLB. He took batting practice with Bryce Harper when he visited his brother. He found money–he was technically a “student manager”, as even with 91 games a season, the majority of D1 NCAA baseball only uses one catcher and the bullpen catcher position worked out well for skirting NCAA rules about paying students and not “technically” expanding your roster. He found fame–athletes, especially National Championship baseball athletes, were celebrities on college campuses. He found support–my dad would visit him just to be able to go to the games, talk to him in the bullpen, share “the love of the game”. (My dad went to Embry Riddle, so even though he played AAA ball for the Yankees feeder team over the summer, he never had the opportunity to play in college.) 

I never was able to earn that “official” roster spot, either, during my time at UNC, but the only time my dad DID visit my school was when I was running at track meets. Or for graduations. Otherwise, there was no reason to be there. To be supportive. It was an unnecessary hassle to see me. 

Yet, I’m to blame for “the joy of achievement” being a fundamental pillar of my ENTJ mentality? You know children are shaped by their genetics and environment, right? Both of which have everything to do with my parents and nothing capable of being controlled by me?

Again, I don’t necessarily “blame” my family for this. 

My parents both grew up under the context of military drafts, constant warfare, tension, and stress. Their fathers arguably could never fully take off their uniforms–how could you? Discipline comes naturally, and both of their own mothers were just as strict. They went to college, hours away from their parents, and travel wasn’t as feasible, affordable, or accessible. People wrote letters, they didn’t text. You sat in silence and learned how to survive on your own. How else were you expected to grow? 

Teaching your children to know they can’t depend on you, emotionally, mentally, physically, and then wondering why they’re hyper independent shouldn’t be so confusing. 

From a VERY young age, I was taught that my pain, my mind, my soul, would be ignored. In more ways than one.

I was taught to “suck it up”. To “move on”. In part, largely because there was no other option. 

When I started therapy my junior year of college, after a horrendous break up that left me unable to cope or function with any resemblance to humanity, it might’ve been the first time in my life that I had support from someone, an adult, who just wanted to learn more about me. Who wanted to learn more about why I do the things I do–not to judge, not for ulterior motives (save maybe some curiosity and also money), but to support and encourage my growth. I had someone who looked at me when I revealed things who would cry and watch me struggle for the words I needed without pressuring me to hurry up and find them. Someone who cared to listen. It only took me 21 years, and I feel like I got there a lot quicker than most Americans (lol, competitive nature, remember). How sad is that. 

I was desperate to make track work, even though I was forewarned and had my own nasty experience with the coaching staff. I hoped it would ease the financial burden I was to my parents. I hoped it would provide the structure and guidance I felt lost without. I wanted it to demonstrate my potential, my work ethic, my strength, mentally and physically, without requiring words. I never quite got the answers or validation from others that I sought, but I certainly found and prioritized myself over all of those miles. In truth, it didn’t end up mattering that the politics made me hate the formal premise of something I had learned to seek peace within, because I knew of the patterns of repetition, the mental clarity, the focus, the drive, that it took and that was enough.

SELF LOVE (24:13)

It makes me sad, in a way, how far humanity, particularly the bounds of “professionalism” within academia and the capitalist job industry, have skewed our purpose on this earth. Even the most kind hearted people worry about exposures over their public image. Exposures of seemingly innocuous human behavior well within the frame of “the norm” for our species–even if a particular conservative consensus portrays a fallacy of otherwise.

An old friend, who, if truth be told, was never really a “friend” to me (even if I thought they were my best friend for a few years) tried to blackmail me recently. In hindsight, and thanks to a reminder from my old therapist that “just because someone was a good friend in X context or Y year doesn’t mean they still benefit you”, it’s blatantly clear her own narcissism and “main character” syndrome has created an environment where she desperately grasps for control. I get it, though I don’t think I’ve ever particularly cared what people are saying about me, because I know my own integrity, character, and commitment to honor and honesty speaks far louder. 

Naturally, she texted my biological mother a link to this blog, framing her interest as a “concern” for my well being and wanting to know how my mother intended to “handle” me, a 28 year old woman. She threw a few threats in (in the same sentences she’d claim she was trying to handle it “like an adult”) like whether she should make her own blog and tell the world that my boyfriend in undergrad once mistakenly told me he was “clean” even though he had NEVER been tested for STD’s ever (Kansas and North Carolina…get your sex education together fucking now) and I got chlamydia. IDK…call me crazy but it seems a little disingenuous for someone about to start a surgical residency to stalk the private blogs of someone who has blocked them on all forms of social media and then try to socially shame them for sexually transmitted infections. Particularly in this modern age of healthcare. You have failed part of your training if that is the case. (I mean, she did fail part of her training but the current standards for med students are ridiculously paced, though that’s a separate discussion). 

…You’ve also failed the social norms of respecting any kind of boundaries. I’m allowed to reference the events in my life and people who shaped it and hold no allegiance to people who have sexually assaulted me when I shared a bed with them. I’m sure you thought I didn’t remember, since I never mentioned it and we remained friends, but you are a predator. And we don’t negotiate with terrorists over here in the U S of A baby. Kindly fuck off and out of my life and live your own without caring more about controlling your public perception than changing your private actions. Good luck.

Maybe that’s the hardest part for people to respect, or acknowledge…That those who you’ve interacted with do have their own stories–which might differ from you, or offer a striking contrast of perspective. But it seems ridiculous to expect them to be under an obligation of misplaced “loyalty” when you had none for them. 

I suppose if you’re obsessed with control this doesn’t strike you as weird. 

Personally, I’m not interested in power–I’m interested in the balance of it. I’m interested in the reciprocity of it. The fluidity and exchange of it. Mindful observation, communication, acknowledgment. There is power in knowledge, as Michelle Obama likes to remind us. Which is why the reciprocity of knowledge of my friends, the people in my life, matter most of all to me. I don’t want to be dominated by imbalances.

When you are motivated by serving others, it becomes so commonplace to put aside yourself and put the needs of others first that it takes a lot of time to re-learn this and not feel guilty for needing to express yourself in the way that you do. I’m reading “The Body Keeps the Score” and it’s incredibly validating about how I break down randomly crying in yoga, reminded of specific events with certain muscle activations, or how my own progress and recovery almost necessitates that I “shed” these events in ways that I feel are beneficial to creating conversation for a more important narrative. 

It is freeing, to speak on it. 

It is freeing, to allow myself to be who I am meant to be. 

I think I put up with a lot of unhealthy behavior, both in this “friendship” specifically and my previous relationships of variety (familial, dating, etc.) because I grew up in an environment that taught me to have unconditional love towards those who abused me. Physically, mentally, and emotionally. I tried setting boundaries, asking for space and things I needed, and they were ignored, downplayed, or frankly dismissed without care. I was a CHILD. Why is it that the burden fell and continues to fall on me to “drive it home”. 

I don’t want that kind of energy in my life any longer.

 It’s cancerous, so to speak. 

But to be who I’m meant to be, I also can’t hate myself or the events that got me here. I must speak on them, because they shaped me into who I am and trying to understand people, the community, life was my form of empathy and compassion when my abusers were calling ME the “narcissist” and “self involved”. Even after all of that, I’d forgive them because I loved them regardless. That’s not good, and that’s not healthy.

While on a walk with a good friend, someone I competed with on the Math team, who is a brilliant mind in STEM, I was reminded of the fact that when everything went wrong in my life, I clung to self love above all. Maybe that was my privilege. I was beautiful, skinny, blonde, and smart, but nowhere NEAR the “prettiest” (nor did I have the knack for fashion or the money) to be “popular”. I was athletic and good at any sport I wanted to try and was allowed to do (which I again contribute to hours of abusive coaching through muscular development). I was gifted in music, though I stopped publicly singing pretty early on because my brother would mock me for how much I loved it. I was smart at every subject, and loved to read and learn. I was enough, for myself. So when others mocked me, however true or false the words that they whispered or shared brazenly, I didn’t really care. I wish they wouldn’t. I didn’t enjoy it. But I knew it wasn’t a reflection of me. They had no meaning over who I was to myself, and that above all was the difference. 

My family has lost power over me, namely because I no longer respect or require the love of people who were seemingly incapable of loving ME. I find it tragic and pathetic that a child was framed as the “difficult” one for questioning her surroundings and that her parents only stopped their abuse when I got smart enough to threaten to call CPS. And instead of asking yourself why your child thought they needed law enforcement to protect their physical environment, you branded them as “difficult”. 

You said “every child runs away that young” when I was ~5 years old. Does every child pack a backpack after a particularly harsh disciplinary measure from their father, hide it in their closet, wait up ALL NIGHT and then sneak out in the early hours of the morning, crossing the dew covered grass barefoot, dragging my cat comforter, backpack slung over my shoulder, and DIABOLICALLY PLOT TO LEAVE WITH A DEFINITIVE PLAN? Then just LITERALLY NOT COME HOME FOR A WEEK until you’re forced to? Does every child not miss their family?

Maybe Disney’s Soul had it right and our personalities are decided for us long before we emerge into the physical realm. 

Maybe to some, even my own father, I AM the “manipulative megalomaniac who is intensely opportunistic”… but that’s Earth’s problem.

Or, maybe I’m just honest

Maybe my “weapons” of communication, my words, my writing are the way that I make sense of my world, because in reality they’ve been dismissed, for far too long.

I know the way I love myself can be matched because of the quality of my actual friendships. 

My best friend from undergrad lived with me all four years. We shared a room for 2 of those, practically, and still held sleepovers in the same bed when we needed the companionship. (#SapphoAndHerFriend). When she was depressed, because hormonal irregularities in women fucking suck and it’s our actual biology and can we please teach it and get universal healthcare for christ’s sake, I’d clean her room for her, and she’d let me, knowing it made me happy to be helpful and she didn’t have the energy or time to prioritize it. Her family took me on every family vacation, I’ve gone to every wedding, beach weekend, or just casual hang outs because I just love to be in their presence. And she loves me for who I am. Who I actually am. Not who other people want me to be.

My sister told me she never doubted whether she wanted to go to college because she saw what my best friend and I had and “just wanted that”. 

Of my two best gal friends from graduate school–one lives in Florida and I literally could just exist happily as her roommate for decades if she wasn’t destined to be a mom sooner rather than later. We didn’t LIKE to go entire days without talking to each other. The other one lives in Boston and has dated one of my best male friends and visiting them is like visiting home. She is the most incredible chef and it makes me hate the “chore” of cooking less and perceive it as an act of love and nutrition rather than just a way of integrating chemistry into health. They make me a better person, because they love me without expectation. They nurture my growth. 

One of the people whose minds I value so much, but whose privacy I’ve also wanted to protect, goes out of his way to remind me that I have already accomplished so much. Even with the “failed” collegiate sports track (to my mother, whose legacy of a full ride D1 scholarship and 9th at Penn Relays was NOT going to be in my future), he would dismiss me undermining my accomplishments and say things like “psshhhh. Please. You’re basically an Olympian.” I thanked him the other day, after my biological mom passively mentioned to me “you haven’t even accomplished anything yet”, for reminding me that success is arbitrary and very subjective.

To me, “success” now means happiness. 

And happiness means mental peace. 

That aforementioned “joy in achievement” that ENTJs crave so desperately now means a wider range of things to me. Maybe it’s the romantic in me, for I am an artist at the root of it. Though I tend to also downplay THAT, because I’ve never taken formal art classes and don’t know proper technique or how to reference (but Van Gogh was also self taught so as long as I don’t take up the drink or cut my own ear off, I think I’m on the right path). Plus, writing is even more self deprecating and emotive than painting and since writing is in everything we do, and most people are capable of doing it, those who don’t publish their work in the same avenue, or get the insight of others prior to publishing, might downplay their significance. The old “if a tree falls in a forest and nobody is around, will it make a sound?” phrase? “If nobody is reading their scribbles, can they call themselves a “writer”?” 

I am done performing. 

My friends have shown me that I don’t need to. 

I have shown them the same. 

I do everything now for self love. 

I have faith in myself, above all, and know I don’t need to tread along these roads alone, but I do need to make myself accessible to those who want to walk with me, for however long.

I want to allow myself to love–who I am with the understanding that I’m certainly not that “difficult”, I’m just “honest”. And it’s perfectly clear the USA struggles with accountability regarding the “truth.” 

I want to allow myself to learn–in both the traditional academia sense and in unconventional routes, such as just seeing what my favorite humans can teach me just by learning about them. Mindful observation. Who they are, holistically.

I want to allow myself to grow–to plant myself where I know I’m happy, where I want to create and cultivate a life.

Maybe I’ve been watching a little bit too much “Game of Thrones”. Maybe Spring bringing warm currents of air, the flowers blossoming, and the leaves returning has happily coincided with my diabolical nature feeling extra refreshed. Maybe the culmination of my fully vaccinated status, embarking on air travel again, and moving plans are the momentous change signifying clarity, peace, and a new day. Signifying hope. 

Or, maybe it’s just love. 

My friend from the math team, let’s call him “Wade”, because I told him his hacker cybersecurity status gives me major “Wade” from Kim Possible vibes, asked how my car accident changed who I am. He’s known me pretty well since middle school, though as an introvert and nerd he fulfilled the “wallflower” role of the public school experience. I told him it changed nothing about “who” I am, PTSD and all, but it changed the way I prioritize life. 

In a way, I feel like I died that night. I watched myself fly into the treeline, out of control, and fully accepted my death. I was content, in that moment. Ready for it. 

All of this just seems like extra time. 

It seems like the time I get to enjoy my life.

It’s the time I get to prioritize the people I love, and those I want to create a life with. Not the things that I want to do. Not the goals I want to achieve.

It’s time I get to create a life for me.

It might seem “illogical”, maybe it’ll derail my career, however temporarily, but I won’t regret it. 

You don’t regret the things you do in love. 

Because at the end of the day, there isn’t enough love in the world. 

How can there ever be? 

And living a life built on love, for yourself, for others, for your community, means acknowledging the things that come easy–the highs, the achievements, the stepping stones–but even more so the ladders that built you into who you are. The foundational concrete. The support beams. Reconstruction and remodeling. The carfax. 

I know what “love” is because I know how to show it to the people in my life. Because it is what I show to everything in my life–my art, my animals, my friendships, my travel, my relationships, the sky and leaves and trees around me. Other people’s love might look different–communication is about learning how to speak each other’s language, and not everyone will try to learn yours, however badly you may wish it.

The great wrestling love of my life and I never worked out because, ultimately, it was me who couldn’t communicate. Which may seem crazy, given that I have essentially a personal diary on the internet freely available for anyone and everyone to read. (Arguably because I opened up to one guy and had to rush to make it seem like that wasn’t MONUMENTAL for me…) Yet, now I think even that was for a reason, even if I don’t understand it quite yet. Even if I never find out why. He was a communications major, too (typical of D1 athletes), but it’s why he knew my sleeping soundly with him was so huge, or why he knew I enjoyed watching him play video games and openly talking to his friends about me, or why he knew I loved him even though I couldn’t speak to him. 

I couldn’t tell him that I called him after my car accident because no, I didn’t have anybody else to call. My mom yelled at me. My sister asked me if she could get back to her birthday dinner while I called her from the side of the road, trying to distract myself from reliving the crash over and over and over again in a seemingly parallel universe to my retinas intaking the actual scene unfolding before me in current time, while I sat there, dissociated, and realized I had moments before decided I was okay with being dead. That I didn’t think I’d be making that phone call…but she didn’t care. I was a distraction. An annoyance. A burden.

I couldn’t tell him that I loved being in his presence because, for seemingly one of the few people’s presences, ever, I felt mental peace. That him trusting his intuition and chasing me down in the dining hall my freshman year, jumping over tables to get to me, was the start of an invisible string weaving our tales and lives together harmoniously for years to come. I didn’t know how to voice to someone that I knew I loved them because I recognized what I felt I’d been denied my whole life. Someone chose me.

And when his dog, the love of his life, who ADORED me, and to this day, who I think he will always, always, ALWAYS wonder if he misses me (even if he’s plenty happy now), had tumors and surgery and needed to consider termination of treatment, I didn’t know how to explain that I knew how scared he was because I’d gone through it with several horses, now, including one that followed me around the pasture like a puppy.

And I don’t think I could be that person for him, even if I felt it, because I didn’t know how to communicate it. And I was scared to learn. Scared he’d judge me and leave me. I couldn’t tell him, someone who was just as worthy of undeniable love and support as I was, that I cared or why. 

In truth, I don’t think I knew how to frame it, because the sad reality is that recognizing that was your experience sucks, for everyone involved. 

How do you explain that to people? 

I went on a date recently, which was nice enough, but I knew it wasn’t “it” because he kept APOLOGIZING to me when I explained who I was. 

I’m not “sorry” for the things that happened to me. Do I wish that I had some different contexts? Sure. Do I make decisions now to prevent myself from being stuck in the same cycles of negativity? Sure. But being “sorry” for the things that made me who I am–someone I LOVE–is never going to be the answer. 

To this day, I’ve only told one man a particular layer of depth regarding my familial life directly. Some of the ones I’ve formally dated have experienced it first hand, for sure. But only one has asked me to tell them. And when I asked him not to pity me, he told me that my telling him had the opposite effect. He said he thought higher of me, like I was stronger. It’s scary to believe him. To think that might actually be the case…especially from someone I love, someone I think already does (and arguably who I just want to) love me. 

…He’s a dumb ass Virgo, though, so try as he might to “not let me in that easy” (his words, not mine), I’m like “bro, you associate me with everything you love. Figure it out. I will not beg for it. I deserve someone who can communicate their love for me without stipulation. Who chooses me every single time, whether it is convenient or not.” My friend from UF was once at a tailgate, about 2 years ago now, and told me this guy was there, sitting off to the side, by himself, looking down at his phone and smiling. He was texting me. It’s little moments like these, times I know he thinks of me, the depth in the moments in which he needs me, that I know he loves me. Even if he struggles with his own words. 

I don’t know why, call it a premonition, but I just think everything is going to fall into place. I think I am exactly who I’m meant to be, for whatever I’m meant to do in this lifetime, because I’m committed to learning and growing along the way. 

There is power in intelligence. 

And there is confidence in the intellect of oneself. 

How better, than to cultivate a life, devoted to loving oneself, one’s friends, one’s chosen family, so fiercely, passionately, and purposefully, that your love becomes that powerful? What else is there?

“Homie, I’m Professional”

Survival Mode
"Homie, I'm Professional"
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-LIL DICKY

You wanna know why I really started this blog?

When I recognized that you could be one of the best doctors in the United States and the uneducated, selfish opinion of a spray-tanned narcissist would render all of that education, power, and years of cultivated intellect useless. 

So what are we talking about today?

Professionalism in the workforce.

Or, how I like to call it, the differences in societal expectations for a female’s private life compared to that of her male coworkers.

Fuck it, let’s jump in.

Please don’t start talking about the patriarchy…

Oh, but guess what… I am. 

Acknowledging the undertones of our own patriarchal society means acknowledging the traditional gender roles that are almost universally similar all over the world at varying stages throughout history: from hunter-gatherer societies to modern day civilization, men worked the manual labor, having stronger physical builds, more calloused hands, and really embracing that burly warrior “save me kind stranger” mentality that I am still (annoyingly) attracted to (& why one of my recent Bumble matches extended that to my being attracted to army / marine branches, but not navy or airforce…woops…guilty as charged), whereas women were the child care providers, the “gatherers”, more passive, and ultimately, weak

As an aside, we all KNOW men were the little bitch babies who rebranded women as “weak” even though a significantly high proportion of women wake up in a pool of their own blood several days of the month, are capable of growing an entire human being inside of them, and then EITHER PUSH SAID BABY OUT THROUGH A HOLE IN BETWEEN THEIR LEGS OR GET IT SAWED OUT OF THEM, MOVING SKIN, INTESTINES, MUSCLES TO THE SIDE, AND THEN REPOSITIONING IT ALL BACK INTO PLACE AND STITCHING THEM BACK UP LIKE NOTHING HAPPENED.

Anyways, with the industrial revolution and moving away from agricultural roles, more and more men entered the workforce in factories or office jobs and women still stayed at home with the kids. Coupled with years of war after war (because a bunch of men across a variety of countries, who had thousands of acres yet demanded more power and sailed across oceans because men are ultimately selfish fucks and think they MUST “know all” and enact a “best” way of life over people instead of just minding their own fucking business) and Rosie the Riveter propaganda, women diverged from their traditional gender roles, traded their corsets and hoop skirts for pants, and realized they did not in fact need to solely rely on someone else for their health and livelihood.

Now, I will acknowledge, that there is some comfort in the fact that I could probably exist solely on my looks, willingly permitting myself to be a baby machine and collecting enough child support to fund my preferred lifestyle for at least 18 years. My dream, however, is for someone to just pay me to exist with no sexual or birth obligations, ya know, like the lifestyle of a wealthy heiress. Unfortunately, I was born a peasant (read: civilian army brat). But, who knows…maybe, when I’m inevitably still single several years from now, working on yet another degree or creative venture, I’ll back track on that and be begging one of the guys I’ve ignored for years to go back to his simp lifestyle and wife me up. However, that’s unlikely, because if there’s one thing I am above all, it’s stubborn.

I’d rather die of loneliness than admit my need for a man.

Do you know how infuriating it is to enjoy and crave the security walking in a male’s presence offers me as a fiercely independent woman? Ugh. gross. 

Yet, as more and more women entered the workforce, diverging from the “1950’s gender norms and nuclear family” model (heterosexual parents of opposite genders with 3 children where the male was the sole financial provider, spending minimum of ⅓ of his life away from his wife and kids and the female was a housewife who did more than a full-time job taking care of the children for no pay other than her husband’s meager factory earnings), we continue(d) to undervalue positions held by women, while placing excessive earning potential in administrative positions largely held by men, continuing to perpetuate women needing to meet the standards of male superiors across almost every field at nearly every moment in their careers. Unless you were a small business owner, or inherited a sum and could fund whatever projects you wanted, you likely would not have made enough money, regardless of what advanced degree or career field you achieved, to comfortably support yourself and propel yourself out of whatever modern day American caste system you were born into. 

Even now, I hold multiple careers: I’m a middle school teacher at a school in a predominantly low-income area, I work as a contract epidemiologist on SARS-CoV-2 (which, is universally no longer a hoax thanks to the negligence of the Republican lawmakers in Washington, D.C.), I have my own small Etsy business with my art. Yet, my male “Best friend” had the audacity to tell me he didn’t want to read my blog “because he would rather read something like that from someone who is ACTUALLY accomplished.” (Literally the biggest eye roll of my life.)

SIR. I developed an advanced stage prostate cancer inhibitor step-by-step from visualizing and recreating the active site to chemical synthesis to spectroscopically confirming it was the right chemical to then testing it in vivo for efficacy BY AGE 22. AND WAS PUBLISHED IN A HUGE NATIONAL SCIENTIFIC JOURNAL. So, excuse me, if I think that your opinion on what it means to be “accomplished”, just because you inherited a few family businesses in the hospitality industry and make over 5 times the money I do, is shit.

All you’ve accomplished is your Ocala Trump rally became a super spreader of coronavirus. Great fucking legacy. Go fuck yourself.

That’s what happens when you devalue the work that actually matters and keeps society running, yet allow men to desperately think they shouldn’t pay taxes on their 87 hotels that are purely for luxury travel. Build some parks, beautify the community, make things accessible, and reinvest in the people and places that allow you to not care about the difficult stuff as much. Because your little facade that let’s you ignore the realities of the world are because of THOSE people who are the ones that make your grandiose Gatsby-lie is cliché. You don’t need 30 fucking cars while people are committing suicide over the bleakness of the poverty they’re born into. 

The disappointing part is this isn’t just a regular occurrence with my male friends, who pretend to be conscientiously aware, yet still won’t call out hypocrisy when it’s in the form of their childhood best friend, spouting off racist, sexist, or homophobic remarks directly across the table from them, but it’s ALSO universally occurred at every workplace. Just this summer, whilst working on coronavirus deployed to a south Florida county health department, my supervisor sent out a site-wide email detailing the dress code, specifically “no skirt shorter than fingertip length”. Yet, the very next day, after confirming my skirt was in fact, several inches below fingertip length, it “was still too short” and she demanded I go home and change or be fired (which, she had no firing or hiring potential over me, for the record). At one point during the conversation she even confirmed it was well within her clearly dictated dress code policy (from her snotty email the day before), but that my legs, which were underneath my desk, which I sat at for almost every hour of the day other than lunch, were still “too distracting”. I don’t know what kind of perverted lesbian you are ma’am, but you’re making the rest of us queer folk look pretty fucking done with your bullshit subjective sexuality on our bodies. As a white, blonde woman, I pass for incredibly heteronormative, too, so I find it a personal obligation to stick up for the small instances when injustice occurs within my presence, whether or not it involves me, because that’s nothing to what people must do when they don’t perceive anyone noteworthy to be a corroborating witness. I believe the phrase was

“you are personally responsible for becoming more ethical than the society you were born into” and I believe that to be firm and true. 

But some of the worst criticism of women comes from other women–so how can we possibly dismantle a system that has somehow pitted conservative women who prefer the comfort of traditional gender roles against the free-spirited wanderlust hippies who just want love in whatever form it takes possible? Especially when the end goal for both is just valuing deep, meaningful, authentic love, it just takes a slightly different form? How do we convince those who don’t want to listen that we all want peace, security, comfort, and love, but the way to do that is not by refusing to acknowledge other mindsets, withholding public support and assistance, and encouraging a safer world for all? And the world as a whole is angry. So we’re right to be fearful. Within our own country, we are edging towards a modern day civil war, all because our piece of shit tangerine who holds the White House hostage called for a “Stand down and stand by” order for the Proud boys aka the Ku Klux Klan aka literal nazi’s in the United States. DID NONE OF YOU FUCKING GO TO THE HOLOCAUST MUSEUM AS CHILDREN? WHAT THE FUCK IS WRONG WITH YA’LL WHO CONTINUE TO LOOK ASIDE AT THIS BEHAVIOR?

I won’t get into it within the context of this discussion, but you can find the direct comparison of Trump and Hitler HERE.

The important context of bringing that up is somehow it made more sense to have yet another shitty white male president instead of a false feminist icon just because the “its her time” mentality was a shit platform for a woman to represent a feminist icon to all the youth of tomorrow. Every former Trump supporter I know, and there are MANY, because I grew up incredibly conservatively, went to undergrad in the state of North Carolina, and went to graduate school in the state of Florida, would STILL have made that same exact choice. The stakes for the first female president were high, sure, but they weren’t unrealistic. Inability to meet these standards isn’t because these women don’t exist, it’s because we’ve sequestered power in such a way that women have been historically dependent on men for generations

We’ve allowed men to remain dominant across every society for so long, because of their sheer physical dominance. So our government has become overtaken with a bunch of ex-military men who could just as easily be shitty football coaches but instead go into politics who condemn themselves to cycles of violence because they never learn the value of a life whilst guiding drones from a distance and we encourage people to never step foot outside of their own little bubble, so the WMAL radio show that my stepdad plays every day, an INCREDIBLY right-wing news station, literally has an anchor calling for preservation of Texas as a red state.

Why do you WANT to be drawn to violence?

How could we ever be encouraging a less violent, better world for our children if we’re refusing to help those who show up on our doorstep?

You all are acting like the people who turned Mary and Joseph away. Might I remind you that the majority of you worship a book about a man of color who is murdered by keepers of the law. 

Yet, women have emotional intellect. Women are devious, breath-takingly alluring, cynical. Women haven’t been encouraged to hide their emotions so they parade them freely. Those who do it without giving a damn on the reception of others, become deadly. I would know, because I’m one of them. If you ever were lucky enough to see it in action, you’d understand the alarming nature of this blog is perfectly packaged into an innocent looking actress who can flip tactics at the drop of a hat. Only I’m not playing someone else’s role. Growing up in an abusive household–physically, mentally, emotionally, will do that to a girl. I’ve just chosen to use it for the “Greater good”, instead of the Kyle Rittenhouse version of a misplaced vigilantism that is really just lunacy. Believe me, I’ve contemplated long and hard about what people I would have enjoyed killing. My high school boyfriend beat the shit out of me for four years, I’ve stared down the barrel of a gun, I’ve beaten the shit out of someone who sexually assaulted me, the thoughts entered in fleeting passes while I stoically faced all of these, and many other, difficult circumstances. I think, even for sane people, or at least the majority of men, if you had been in that position, your fight-or-flight would’ve been activated and you would’ve put your own survival over your abuser any day. I’m resilient. A survivor. So if you want me to let the law hold them accountable, stop undermining my faith in its uses. 

If I were a man, my confidence that inevitably teems with sexual undertones due to the physical attractiveness of my outward physical form would be APPLAUDED. My acknowledgment of reality and the need for pragmatic decisiveness would be paraded on a Joe Rogan podcast much like Elon Musk. Nobody would make the “humble too” comments when I specify not feeling the draw to be tied down, because my value wouldn’t be tied to another person acknowledging it’s worth and placing it above their own, and I wouldn’t be assumed to place a greater value in someone else’s career and educational development over my own. 

So in 2020, what is the point of me “shutting up” and “getting used to it” when my aunt had to deal with the same criticism, commentary, and hurtful insinuations over fifty years ago just because it’s the “cultural norm”. Why the fuck do we think that is just acceptable, inevitable? Safer for women? And now that we KNOW better, when we can document account after account to prove this is a HUGE issue across multiple cultures, why the fuck aren’t we refusing to let each and every single one of the 50 states progress at their own pace of dismantling racism until history is in fact doomed to repeat itself because Captain America: Civil War is about to be released and suddenly tubby middle-aged white men are going to act like him taking a “liberal” stance (condemning racism) means they should boycott Marvel or whatever fucking universe he’s from because apparently human decency is a fucking political issue still. How about you channel that rage towards your other white men who are the reason we have to have this conversation over and over and over again? Okay, buddy?

People suck in every color, don’t think whites are so superior. 

When I make any decision in my personal life: sexually, related to social media or how I communicate with my friends, what clothing I choose to buy or be seen in in public, it can never be made without considering what those decisions might prevent me from doing within my career. But why is that so? We have a president who has undeniably sexually assaulted hordes of women, is implicated in a pedophilic sex trafficking ring with two other disgraced former best friends, and yet, even with that, this man was elected as president of the united states. Supposedly the most coveted position in the world. And I still didn’t want the first female president, a symbol for future generations of women to come, to be one who lacked transparency, who stood by her husband and political marriage without acknowledging it, who publicly condemned her husband’s mistress, a young girl who spent time with a very powerful man–a man of whom was supposed to be the bigger person, the authority, of literally every person in the United States. Fucking pathetic excuse of a nation we live in. THOSE were our choices?

And how do we go about enacting change if those of us who have access to higher education, even those like me who take out thousands of dollars of loans because what knowledge gives me will never not be worth it, get drawn into the bubbles of glitter and distracted by our years in debt until we look around and realize the smooth-talking con men of the world have usurped logic and condemned those in the public eye such that no sane person would ever willingly enter it. Your life inevitably going to be picked apart with such vulgarity that Joe Rogan’s Spy-Kids Floop Fooglie’s thumb-men looking ass can somehow roast you for your physical appeal as if there was any world where his opinion was somehow more valid when you were just trying to make the world a better fucking place. 

Maybe its because of the optics. Scientists were historically meager, weak, depressive folks. Our increased intellect meant we questioned the world with such intensity that we realized the bleakness in how far society has skewed humans from our innate purpose on this world–of actually enjoying and learning to appreciate the natural world around us, instead of always desperately building wall after wall because we’re scared of what’s outside. Did we ever think that Albert Einstein maybe looked around, saw the state of the world, and was like “we need to do something about this.” Why do we always reference his depression in studies about his life but not about how depression is inevitable in a society that puts money and individual prowess over enabling safe, loving human interaction? Of welcoming your neighbors? On teaching values of peace without tying it to one particular religion because there’s no “one” right way of life and if we don’t know that by now, then I really don’t think you should be able to vote in a cultural melting pot of a country. 

Or, maybe, it’s because when scientists have spoken out, they die. You can’t tell me those Russian doctors just fell out of those windows on their own. Or that Edward Snowden wasn’t arguably justified in warning the American people, even when, in my opinion, it’s hugely naive to assume every moment of your life ISN’T being watched, unless you live in the middle of bumfuck nowhere. To be honest, having a trail for people gives me, as a single woman, a sense of peace. It’s accountability. And as a woman, 1 in 5 of whom will be raped or attempted to be raped in their lifetime in the United State. Although for every 1000 sexual assaults, only 230 are reported, and 995 of those 1000 perpetrators will walk free. So I like knowing that there may now be some greater chance to hold those people accountable. But scientists are also usually quieter, nerdier, we were bullied when we were younger. I’m currently facing the knowledge that if Trump really does enact his authoritarian rule over the United States and refuse to leave office, come November, with some false claim about the corruptness of the mail-in ballot system, even though he had nothing to say about it when the same system benefitted him in 2016, I might need to escape to Switzerland and hide out for the content on this blog, because it may become “illegal” and I’ll be back in the Salem Witch Trials hysteria I thought we had finally moved past as a society. If you think I’m being unnecessarily dramatic, I would like you to open your fucking eyes to the reality that our federal government is currently preparing for the scenario in which he refuses to leave office and tries to enact martial law with a militarized police and Proud Boys army. 

And there’s truth in Michelle Obama’s infamous “when they go low, we go high” mentality, but it’s also as equally important to draw the line and know when to say “Step the fuck back, what I’m doing with my life does not involve you at all so take your god damn opinion and shove it up your ass.” If white men are wondering why people are still so irritated when everyone has the right to vote now, please look at Congress, to this day, and let me know how a majority of white men are SURE that they are the reckoning force to bring values of diversity, representation, and dismantling oppression into this world when really they’re just telling us they’re still comfortable assigning themselves as the gatekeepers of determining what topics have validity or not… even when they have no actual experience in the fields. 

We’ve also undeniably had an overwhelming presence of military leaders within every level of our government, largely due to name recognition and the power of symbolic imagery, so it’s going to take more than one black, male president to change the cultural ideology, especially when every new colored, queer, or gendered individual is going to be the first _______ whatever position still for decades to come depending on which state they choose to live in, inevitably overcoming the same obstacles time and time again all because we think leaving it up to “state’s rights” means parts of Alabama still exist in the good ole 1950’s, even though we should probably be sterilizing people that contribute to placing less value on knowledge (in whatever form), think LESS government will solve the whole “crime” issue, or just have an IQ below a certain point. I’d rather sterilize them, at least temporarily until they can be educated, than the immigrant women who seek out a better life, only for the “pro-life” (read: really just anti-abortion) crowd to refuse to acknowledge their existence because they want to universally assign a devalued human belief onto an entire cultural group with no knowledge of them as an individual all because they (falsely) believe immigrants don’t pay taxes, despite the fact that undocumented immigrants paid tens of millions of dollars more in taxes to a system whose healthcare they can’t access validly, a system they can’t vote in, yet one whose president, worth billions of dollars, pays less than a middle school teacher with two degrees working in a low income community. I believe it was Miss Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez who tweeted, “Just to be clear. There is nothing “pro life” about denying people comprehensive sexual education, making birth control harder to access, forcing others to give birth against their will, and stripping them of healthcare and food assistance afterwards.”

It’s sickening, the hypocrisy.

And the patriarchy IS because of the military, but I find it impossible to believe that your prejudice towards military strength is so usurped by your views that you truly believe a man who created an environment where half of our country, particularly the die-hard, supposedly pro-military regions of Texas and Florida, will question utilizing masks and doubting science, in an age of global warfare of biochemical weaponizing, is a good man. If that’s the truth, then you are an absolute idiot. I have no sympathy in saying that because your judgment is clearly clouded. Maybe all of you constitutionalists were right and only 6% of the population SHOULD have the ability to vote. Plot twist–it shouldn’t be you uneducated cucks. We sealed our fate the day we tied property ownership to voting potential–securing power in the hands of those who take more than their “fair” share in a system undeniably rigged to benefit them. You should hold yourself to a higher standard than that as a human being. If your religion hasn’t taught you to place value outside of monetary gain, then this is the entire problem with organized religion.

And in addition to sequestering power in the hands of (historically) white men of various European descent, those same men now have this delusional sense of importance because they have tangible, real idols in every position and industry that are taught to them from such a young age that nothing seems impossible, except, in the modern world, maybe finding a girl who doesn’t still enjoy shaking her ass to funny lyrics on Tik Tok. Men–we all know you’re just jealous that you feel so restrained your theatre-geek-loving-self is hidden under more layers than Shrek. Get with the times, gents.

It’s that same elevated importance in men too that let’s them just “decide” not to be aware about the realities of the world. They cram a year of emotions into the weeks of their NFL fantasy football leagues–as sports has historically been one of the only ways men have been allowed, by society, in the United States, to actually CARE about something. They can get emotional, but only in reference to competition. But life is a game, baby, and we’re all just here to win. Even Albert Einstein is quoted as saying “you have to learn the rules of the game, and then play it better than everybody else.” But men with small minds, like said aforementioned Joe Rogan, Donald Trump and pretty much any white male still endorsing him, only see a limited sense of competition. They lack that emotional edge that encompasses the nature of unconventional warfare women are so talented at. Whether it’s been repressed for years because they’ve been taught that was the only way to achieve success or they’re just upset that the hot girl from their high school wouldn’t fuck the pompous pig they’ve always been, even back in the day, that lack of connection to empathy will always render them weaker. You see, for those of us who have had to learn to compartmentalize emotions–as I said, it’s a dog eat dog world out there and I’m always going to survive–any man who overcompensates his financial success with material goods and nothing else substantial is always going to come in second. Or, as I like to call it, be the first loser. Mainly because they don’t actually understand true happiness. Their version of winning, like everything else in their life, is a facade. They slap a price tag to success, or a position title, even the most coveted one in the world, now so pathetically devalued that it will never hold the same weight it once did, and cry out desperately for outward validation because they’re unable to provide that inner sense of validation to themselves, and they always will be unable to do so.

Within that same group of men is a special place in hell set aside for the men in STEM fields. Men who have been so pathetically focused in their careers, a great, noble goal (but again, it’s JUST as necessary to learn how to communicate your goals to the general public for it to be relevant, and teachable) that they have to be sat down like children and you feel like a fucking parental figure of a man several years older than you who refuses to set aside the time to expand his own cultural awareness. No, instead, he begs for YOU to set aside the time, time and time again, to be the one responsible for educating him, even though the information is freely fucking available on the internet, but you just don’t see it as a beneficial use of your time unless you can also potentially fuck the source of it one day. Cry me a river. As I said, I’m not mad, I’m just way less interested. I have been, since, even several months into getting to know me, you revealed you were STILL contemplating whether to vote independent or not. What the fuck, dude. 

Or the likes of those researchers, Scott Hardouin, MD and Thomas Cheng, MS, amongst others, who published in the August 2020 Journal of Vascular Surgery issue addressing the “Prevalence of unprofessional social media content among young vascular surgeons”. Which, hear this, went into a lovely, completely fucked up detail in which, a man, went through the social media of male and female surgical trainee, unethically, as he did not have the permission to use the Association of Program Directors in Vascular Surgery database for his “research”. (Which, if you ask me, honestly just sounds like a bunch of hot female surgical trainees wouldn’t fuck him, so he wanted to Mark Zuckerberg his way into the medical field by creating a way to effectively rank them that would negatively hurt their careers or personal sense of worth.) So these MALE students, supervised by MALE leadership, subjectively ranked social media posts of women wearing bikinis, OFF-HOURS, as “POTENTIALLY UNPROFESSIONAL” compared to men on social media. Note: male bathing suits were not “unprofessional”. Even if you wanted to potentially label a male bathing suit like a speedo as “unprofessional”, they WOULDN’T, because that could constitute discrimination towards the LGBTQ community. And medicine is the forefront of this discussion because we, as scientists, as cultivators of the human body, of artists of humanity, should be the most progressive of all, especially of the subjectivity of social constructs related to gender and social norms. Not to mention that women comprise only 10% of active vascular surgery members, so the barriers they certainly already face in a male-dominated field definitely don’t need to be raised. 

WE AS A SOCIETY PROBABLY NEED TO ACKNOWLEDGE THE FUCKING FACT THAT PEOPLE SHOULD NOT ALWAYS “BE” PROFESSIONAL. AND YES, I CAN SAY THAT, BECAUSE OF THE VERY MAN SEATED IN THE FUCKING WHITE HOUSE. Seriously. No matter what your job is, you should be able to move through your private life, if you’re not hurting anybody else (which is why all you dumb fuck anti-maskers don’t get to just have your fucking “freedom”) with honesty and not be constantly terrified of the retributions. If the medical community is so progressive that a huge public university’s medical school can shelter a self-proclaimed potential pedophile who was investigated by the SBS and had his parents destroy all records of the child pornography he did in fact access, then we can be progressive enough to stop fucking stigmatizing women. Especially in relation to the blatant sexualizing of the female body through toxic patriarchal and heavily Christian overlapping themes, as medical professionals, you should acknowledge that your “danger zones” or “private parts” are literally just another body part and maybe we should be able to colloquially discuss aspects of health without stigma, and by shaming almost exclusively the female human body, we’ve condemned the women in our society to cycles of violence that are running rampant and unobstructed, led by the man currently housed at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. Get your shit together, men. Because I’m fucking sick of it.

Wanna know just a few other bullshit things I’ve had to deal with as a woman in STEM, before you go overreacting or claim that I’m “unfounded”. Ask every single fucking woman for examples of things that they have to do differently in order to not either put themselves at risk in a male-led world or to allow themselves the ability to continue on the clearest, easiest path without adding additional obstacles into their own path–I guarantee you, the list will continue growing.

To date, I have:

-Had a man come up to me and my blonde fellow scientist and grad school BFF at a professional, international conference, and tell us, (making the assumption that we did not already know), that “people will see your beauty and assume you are not smart. You will have to work twice as hard.” We know. This conversation is proof of that. I watched Legally Blonde when I was like, 9, dude.

-Have had my fellow coworkers, one of whom I got the job, team up and basically decide they no longer wanted to be my friend or communicate with me at work, and one even had her boyfriend, who I’ve been friends with for over 8 years, block me on social media because she was so insecure in my friendship with him, while I still worked with them both. He’s literally the only person I can nerd out about pharmaceutical and biochemistry stuff, you stupid bitch. I hope you don’t spend the rest of your life that catty.

-The aforementioned skirt incident

-Been told that I’m “difficult” or a “bitch” more times than I could count–professional and private life alike, even when I was in the right, even related to my studies. Shout out to Tina Fey, because bitches really DO get stuff done, and men still love them. I’m not settling, baby. Get on my level or get your ass back to the dugout. You’ll be back up to bat eventually. Know your place on the roster.

-Have essentially been disowned by my family all because I lived in Florida and posted pictures of my absolutely phenomenal ass because, 1. I can and 2. That’s me, and 3. I’m the one who has to answer for my actions, not you, so once again, shut the fuck up. I went to Europe 3 years in a row. I study the human body. I question the bounds of reality. It’s gonna get a lot fucking weirder throughout my life, you can’t stop it if you tried. So stop trying.

-Have to wear glasses (they’re blue light and do nothing other than prevent me from getting a headache), yet am instantly questioned less and have to defend myself on far fewer occasions than when I don’t.

-If I walk into a room of patients with a male, particularly one who is physically taller than me, HE is assumed to be the superior. They will still ask him for his opinion, even after acknowledging my role as the superior, even though, when the roles are reversed, they NEVER ask for my second opinion.

-People are more likely to ask for a second opinion in general, or have to search or “look further into” my knowledge before they determine that I was, in fact, correct. I speak with conviction and authority purposefully, and yet it still happens. My own mother is guilty of this. 

-A male with the aspirations I have would be met with a constructive tone of acceptance when he explains his life goals. The possibility of a family is never mentioned–he’ll have time for both whenever he decides to settle down. Instead, I get the laughing disbelief and “you’re really something, aren’t you”. Oh, I for sure fucking am, or at least will be. I will achieve every single one of my dreams, and thanks to Claire (my wonderful therapist), I won’t even COMPLETELY discount a family, because there is absolutely no reason why I SHOULDN’T achieve everything I want in life. 

-Nearly every single one of the men I’ve dated in my private life have LOVED that ambitious drive. It attracted every fiber of their being to me. It was a magnetic pull, entrancing, the song of a siren, calling them to their impending doom upon the shores. It’s also the reason every single one of them succumbed to weakness, straying from our relationship with dishonesty and lying of various forms, so pathetic and scared of their own weaknesses that they then used the very reasons they fell in love with me so quickly to also be the reason they leave down the road. And I’m supposed to feel bad for them? No.

I’d much rather be single than undervalued.
Fuck that. 

Like I said, I’ll just keep getting degrees. Asserting my dominance in the most tangible way for females to do so. Because I am questioned, I do need the letters behind my name to command the same, or at least near the level of respect my male counterparts are immediately granted just by their very existence. And because their voices carry more weight, I unfortunately also need them to open their ears and listen to what I’m telling you. And then to SPEAK about it, and be an advocate, to their male counterparts who discount the validity in my assertions. Who actually need to hear it from them because, even if they don’t completely change their mind, acknowledging that behavior isn’t appropriate or DOES exist, STILL, can at least make them that much more likely to identify it if and when they witness it for themselves. It’ll make them stop and think, whether they outwardly admit it to you or not. And eventually they can no longer continue to deny it without looking like an ignorant asshole. 

Luckily, my ass is nice enough that many (white) men do follow me and will actually still take the time to look into it, out of nothing more than curiosity, so it helps me blend into the audience I need to appeal to. The audience that needs to start educating themselves so it can no longer be my responsibility to condemn myself to the task. Thank you Old Row for posting that picture of me on the pizza floatie. I gained like a thousand followers in a few hours, though with starting over anonymously under a pseudonym, I’m no longer reaping the benefits of men sliding into my DMs as frequently, just to pay me for something harmless like pictures of my feet, or me belittling the size of their dick mercilessly. Seriously, y’all are some repressed mother fuckers. 

I’m happy to make the money off of it, but since so many of you do it, the fact that I do make money off of it shouldn’t need to be some mystifying taboo secret. We live in a capitalist society with terrible redistribution of wealth. The median household income in 2018 was $74,600. Which means that, if you lined up every US household’s yearly salary, from least to greatest, and took the middle number, it would be $74,600. Half of all of our households make less than that. The top 1% of families in our country hold 40% of the wealth. The bottom 90% hold LESS THAN 25%. We are in a global pandemic and the wealth of our handful of billionaires increased by trillions of dollars yet most individuals received only one $1200 stimulus check, and that’s only IF they filed their taxes last year. We instead prioritized corporations and businesses over the individual fucking people? What the fuck is wrong with our government. Get that money, sis. They won’t respect you either way, so you might as well cause a fuss while you do it. 

And I played fucking football in highschool so I think I can make that statement. 

Clearly, tying every aspect of ourselves as humans under some guise of “professionalism” doesn’t impact men in the same way that it impacts women. When is the last time someone would see a male in a bathing suit and determine they “weren’t going to use them as a surgeon” based on how their body looked. If anything, the worse it looks, the better. They probably spend all of their time in the hospital anyways. For women, you have to tread this delicate line of being pretty, but not too pretty. You have to be sexually appealing, but your boobs can’t be too large, or they dominate the frame of your face. You can’t look too nice, either, there has to be an edge of mystery. I get assumed to be “slutty” for wearing a bikini in Florida (which was cheeky, yes, but much less risque than the actual G strings of the strippers in the cabana next to me) when you check my instagram, even though I haven’t had sex in 2 years and am a serial committed relationship person in general. (Mostly because the men fall quickly and they fall hard. Like I said, they’re depraved of such intimate connection that the second they see they won’t be judged for it, they’re captivated by the allure, only to recognize the course of their path and draw screeching breaks like the train in Snowpiercer at the realization their independence may be threatened. It won’t. Because mine also won’t be. But this is besides the point). 

And I don’t feel the need to leave that stuff on “private”, because part of my entire purpose in life, and part of public health, is reducing the stigma around things that cause inherent struggles and cognitive dissonance within society. It would be limiting my potential to withhold it, more afraid of the acceptance and how it is perceived than having to compromise my own values. I would rather use myself as an example over and over again than ignore the realities of the world out of “convenience”, even when the things don’t necessarily involve me as much. Because the shape or appearance of my ass has absolutely no fucking relevance to my ability to decipher and analyze data, to formulate opinions, but it absolutely can help me captivate a larger audience. To use my platform and people who otherwise would not come into contact with me for a greater purpose. You all obviously read and listen to this. You’re taking in my mentality, savoring it (or despising, either way, you’re supporting and enabling me, so thank you). I hope I can somehow intrigue you within the process of learning enough that you continue to show your support. 

In fact, one of the main reasons I keep myself in such good physical shape is that when men can clearly acknowledge my physical superiority, and tangible strength, it’s slightly easier for them to acknowledge my mental strength as well. 

It started with the Presidential Physical Fitness test in third grade, sorry Madison, I could do more pull ups than you because I had 3 hours of gymnastics every night. 

Continued into high school, where I ran with the boys in track, because they were the only ones who would actually run more than 2 miles with me, or when I ran 5k’s around the various naval bases, emasculating the marines with my light, elvish footsteps in my Nike Frees. 

Or when I played football and kicked a game winner, so I was finally “accepted”, even though I could have been used just as much to run the ball in, and actually play any other position or even like quarterback because not only was I fast as fuck, but I can read a sports game better than most people. That’s where intellect gets you as an athlete. The Eli Manning of all of my sporting teams. 

Or maybe it was playing baseball when the mom on the opposing team filed a complaint about me jumping in when the team needed an extra player, all because I gunned her son down at home from center field. By the next game, I was officially registered and all of my runs counted. Go take your participation trophy home, lady.

Or on the futsal courts, when I had to body the fuck out of the physically stronger guys, who took those opportunities to let my ass graze up against their pre-teen cocks, only to be like “WOAH!” just because I was playing exactly the same fucking way they played with the guys. You don’t have to go easy on me, ya know. I actually hate that. 

And that demeanor commands respect, because men have become so warped that the only time they are allowed to openly experience emotion in our patriarchal society is through sport. Coupled with the endorphin high of physical performance, and that maybe being one of the only ways many of them have ever been validated or heard words of affirmation, it’s no wonder they tie physical performance to desirability so much. So keeping myself in shape has its advantages. Having a six pack, which, for women is even more difficult than for men, because generally men don’t have a lil layer of fat protecting their uterus, and the muscle definition I have draws the acknowledgement that I can hold my own in battle. I am a gladiator, a soldier. But I shouldn’t have to make myself physically intimidating to hold my own in a progressive world. 

And I also shouldn’t have to soften my striking intimidation, my unconventional warfare, just because it comes across that much harsher from the face of a beautiful woman. You really fail to recognize that Athena, the goddess of war strategy, was ALSO the goddess of wisdom, poetry, and art? The woman born wearing battle armor was still able to understand and appreciate the softer side of the world. It’s all connected to emotional intelligence. That’s how you achieve true strength. 

So instead of stigmatizing women, or limiting anyone’s identity to strictly their professional role, how about we stop being so obsessed with specialization of just one thing that we neglect the multifaceted reality. Specializing and becoming the best is only really important for its generalizability. But the very fact that you seek the spotlight means you don’t want to exist in complete anonymity, that’s where the hermits who wander amongst the Appalachian trail reside. And if we seek greatness, which, historically, the USA has been rather inundated with thrusting upon everyone else in the world, then we actually need to start being great. Of achieving higher levels of self actualization. Of requiring greater standards for the level of humanity in our society, which starts with not creating an environment where your worth, and subsequent political vote, is SOLELY dependent financial status. And those who are truly great do not refuse to acknowledge their flaws.

So knowing that these issues exist, we need to do better. Men, specifically, need to do better. But also the women who use their positions or desperation for a grasp of power to harm other women, instead of climbing the ladder together. Even Drake has been trying to tell y’all that it shouldn’t be lonely at the top–that defeats the purpose. I talk about my experiences all the time, not to highlight the wrong doings of others (that is just a pleasant lil latent effect) but so everyone can learn from my mistakes or the events in my life to better themselves. It’s as self-critical as it is confident. I approach my personal life with the same scientific separation in the quest for knowledge that I do my IRB-approved studies. 

And more often than not, ESPECIALLY in therapy, I struggle to get through these discussions.

It’s HARD to be so resilient and strong.

I didn’t name this blog or podcast “Survival Mode” because I was frolicking through the fucking flowers my entire life.

It’s not easy to sit down and have these discussions with yourself, let alone others. But it’s a lot harder to live in a world that ignores it. 

Nobody is fucking happy for a reason. People are escaping to social media instead of reality for connection because reality sucks. But you have every ability to change the reality you live in, even just a little, and even by example. Let’s stop setting unrealistic standards for humans, even in professional roles. Let’s require accountability, introspection, vulnerability, even from our leaders. Because our leaders should be setting the greatest example of all. 

And life is a competition, yes, but we don’t have to measure the value in it by productivity. The best creation is not rushed. There is value to slowing down, beauty in recognizing and accepting the madness. It is luminescent, ethereal. We need to value humanity for the things that actually make us human in society–our connection, expression of emotion, ability to learn and grow together. Our capitalist society doesn’t need to dictate EVERY SINGLE THING such that every aspect of our lives must be monetized, or you only release art when you think it’s profitable. Learn to express yourselves. Learn to express humility. Compassion. Empathy. It’s far more complex and intriguing than anger.

Learn to once more value being human. 

Sources:

https://medicine.umich.edu/dept/surgery/news/archive/201904/women-vascular-surgery-symposium

https://www.jvascsurg.org/article/S0741-5214(19)32587-X/fulltext#:~:text=Potentially%20unprofessional%20content%20appeared%20in,(6%20accounts%2C%202.5%25)%2C

Ghislaine Maxwell Pt. III

Welcome. Good luck.

Pt. I Found Here
Pt. II Found Here

When Does Your Body Become “Yours”? 

Around the closure of middle school, and with the start of my body’s natural entrance into puberty due to this incredibly natural concept called “aging”, I began experimenting sexually with my peers, which is, yet again, NORMAL. By that, what I really mean is I made out with a guy once in the summer after 8th grade but maybe if I was lucky, I went to a sleepover with incredibly basic versions of spin-the-bottle (and by “Basic”, I mean they blew me away as “risque” at the time and really we weren’t even using tongue yet.) I had quit gymnastics, opting to pursue soccer, track, and football in highschool, as well as my elite equestrian career. I went from just 4’11” to 5’7” over a short 12 month span, joined a travel soccer team with little to no prior experience, and moved from my P.O.A. pony, Sandy, to my palomino horse, Wildfire, as the fences surpassed 3’ in my eventing competitions. I was leveling up in so many ways, but for the first time in my life, men (boys) were actually starting to take recognition of me. No longer was I the shy, quiet nerd in class. I was the shy, quiet nerd that my male teenage peers wanted to fuck. 

However, according to my incredibly overbearing father, I wasn’t allowed to date, I could have absolutely no social media of any kind, I must get his permission for everything. 

Hopefully we will have made some progress by the time my friend’s children are of adolescent age, but all that set-up was some premonition in my mind that I was “his” to give away once he judged someone worthy. My body, but particularly sexual expression, was controlled by others and outside of my control. An idea I still angrily reject, that makes me not unable to even fathom getting married (because the archaic thought that someone might have the audacity to either ask my estranged father for my hand in marriage or that I would need anyone to accompany me down the aisle as if it’s not the stare-inducing catwalk in whatever form fitting gown I squeeze myself into that I’ve daydreamed of performing on my entire life.)

I had exactly two discussions on sexual education with my parents, or rather, my mother. The first, when my fifth grade class separated the boys and girls one day at the end of the year, after first getting our parents to sign a permission slip for us to discuss “the birds and the bees”. The second, when I finally approached my mom about getting on birth control for my “first real boyfriend”, even though I’d already been having sex for months prior to that. Looking back, it really makes me question why Christianity-influenced sexual education is allowed to perpetuate in public schools, or our government, for that matter, and how the way I was taught as a woman to view my body was ever viewed as “healthy”. At least it wasn’t the abstinence-only bullshit some places still desperately cling to, but dammit do we need to make some more progress. 

Sex, and the female body, just wasn’t a topic of discussion. I wasn’t allowed any of the fancy magazines, because Cosmopolitan was trash and full of made-up tips. Not only that, but I shouldn’t even touch myself. The blasphemous vitriol encompassing soiling my body with my own touch was unbearable. I had to hide my feminine products behind carefully placed larger items on the conveyor belt while checking out at the store, tucked away discreetly on the shelves within my own private bathroom, zipped within the pocket of the purse I carried to and from the restroom–terrified of the moment someone might realize exactly what they were. I understood the very basics of what I was physically going through, but I didn’t know what was normal. I wasn’t sure if the things I was feeling were common, because I was never actually taught why hormones were important for women to understand. Thanks to sports, other than the height jump, I really didn’t have physical changes that necessitated any additional discussions. 

All of these small things added up to make me feel ashamed of being a woman. I was too ashamed to even learn about my body on my own either–reliant on the hands, mouths, and penises of whatever males caught my attention over the years to be able to anticipate what my body needed better than myself. Nevermind where to even start with self-educating–am I even allowed to google terms like that? What if my father looked up the search history and I got grounded? And what did it mean, to someone who wasn’t particularly religious any longer, contemplating atheism vs. Bahaism vs. being agnostic, to question their “purity” or lack thereof for their next partner? 

We don’t want to be faced with the reality of paying for our teenage daughter’s choice of vibrator, but we’re okay with consoling them after their adolescent heartbreak also ends in slut shaming for succumbing to the basic biology flooding their endocrine system. I guarantee you, if they’re getting themselves off, if they view sexuality as more of an enlightening rather than a sin, then they’ll have a lot less interest in a boy who doesn’t share those thoughts.

I get it, no parent wants their children to become sexually active. They seem so small, so innocent, so naive, and all you want to do is protect them from the horrors of the reality of the world. 

But part of creating such a historically militaristically superior country, (such that all international trauma occurs outside of our geographical boundaries and we therefore feel safe from, or even encourage, as long as it makes our personal lives a little more cushion-y and we remain naive to the purpose behind the maneuvers) and living in a “developed” nation, (where technology is meant to replace a large portion of the working class so we, collectively, as a country, may actually enjoy being human) we are supposed to have the time, stability, and ability to educate ourselves and improve upon our past behaviors so that the world, or at least our country, local communities, and friendships, are more enjoyable.

Is it really a surprise that a country built on white, conservative, Christian, patriarchal values and so resistant to change to the reality of the NATION around them would also have a generation of women whose days as a youth were filled with values of independence, being whoever you wanted, traveling wherever you wanted in the world, but weren’t expected to resist against the numerous legal restrictions restricting autonomy over our own bodies? Or that we won’t question the law, and subsequently the behavior or ideology that facilitated and created a culture that thought viewing women in this way was the most appropriate? Or that I’m supposed to listen to a religious culture whose own willingness to forgive and look the other way has damaged hundreds of thousands of children throughout history, yet still grasps to this fallacy that believing in it somehow pushes you above others in the rankings of the world? 

I don’t even want to hear from the “not all Christianity” people, because the reality of religion, particularly globally, is it has MANY more implications than just moral or ethical peace of mind. And being a Christian doesn’t make you a bad person, that isn’t what I’m getting at nor do I think that in the least. There are plenty of decent Christians. But it is also impossible to ignore the globally historical context of Christianity’s influence over FEMALE rights (again, largely because it has been most common amongst patriarchal societies such that the two ideas go hand-in-hand in interwoven confusion) and from a more generalized perspective, latent functions of religion are consistently, decade-after-decade, country-after-country, global-movement-after-global-movement used to ostracize minorities, spread hatred, and (in my country, the USA) stigmatize humanity in such a way that we are terrified of the reality of what it means to “be human” and look for some hope to follow when the bounds of our knowledge fail. Not to mention the spread of disease and exploitation of land in the name of “missionary goals” that has just wiped through populations such that the Trail of Tears is essentially America’s Holocaust and society wants to look the other way or skim over it in U.S. history. (That isn’t an insult to the Holocaust either, that’s a testament that the USA has committed horrific crimes against marginalized people on the same land we now govern and we can’t really look the other way and say we were always doing things “for the greater good”, because it’s necessary to specify for WHOSE greater good, which is usually our white European ancestry.) 

Those decisions, made based on that very same Christian mindset and ideology, were horrible. Inexcusable. And still affect the lives of the descendants today because the average person only makes roughly 10% more money than their parents. So what if you don’t know who your parents are? What if you come from a single family home? How do you escape cycles of poverty when doing so is choosing between the safety and security of your family and emotional love of like-minded people (if you were lucky enough to grow up in a community like that) with a circle of peers who had the literary resources, the representation of historical figures, the financial security that you lacked? And how do you do that when those who were responsible have washed their hands of it, prayed for forgiveness, done ten hail mary’s or whatever and believe that just because they wouldn’t outwardly do or say anything in person that it must not actually happen…that it was propaganda, a leftist LIE, bad editing, even though the evidence that land, lives, and money are being moved around like pieces on the chessboard in Harry Potter are right in front of you, publicly available data. Or that you’re lucky if, like Ron, Hermione, and Harry in “The Sorcerer’s Stone”, you get to make your own choice of movement and aren’t just a pawn under the guise of someone else’s direction. 

My purpose of this is truly not to condemn Christianity. It’s just important to be honest during reflection and acknowledge that identifying your belief system as the “right” one will inevitably create an environment where those less educated, or more warped by power, utilize that concept to establish dominance over others (if there is a “right” choice, then surely logic points at the others as “wrong”). Sure, that’s the way the world works, and religion has persisted, or at least been prioritized and preserved, throughout civilization after civilization, but that’s just one of the reasons why I’m not religious. 

Your “not all Christians” comments that I KNOW some of you mentally screamed just serves to protect your own public interests because you, individually, try to be a decent Christian and you either worry your own behavior or identity will be used against you as an insult (much like characteristics of minority’s identities have been used insulting against them…by Christianity… for the record) or you would rather live in blissful ignorance because the thought of it happening in your own little bubble of Christian community is too terrifying of a concept. This sermon wasn’t for you. Not all of us get that choice. And most importantly, not all of us grow up and can remain happy in those environments, so the premise that “if you don’t like it, leave” doesn’t really work when it instills generations of unnecessary neglect, abuse, and trauma. 

The country, community, and household I grew up in are/were all white, conservative, Christian values. I went to a private school the majority of my early life and church every Sunday. My father, a well revered man within the local community, was admired, revered for his work with special education individuals. My parents were married quickly after college, had 3 children, a large home, a small (family) farm, it should have been the American dream. 

So why couldn’t I be happy, or move on from it, even years later? When I’m no longer religious? When I no longer live with, or even speak to, my biological father? 

We can all learn from studying the experience of trauma… 

In my own education and discovery of reconstructing the values of my prior reality with prioritizing what I want in life, who I want to be in life, what I actually value, I realized I felt compelled to revisit, to question, these experiences, much in the same way that makes me a great, passionate scientist, BECAUSE I have had to experience a lot of these things alone, but I don’t have to anymore. 

For the record, two years ago if you asked me whether I anticipated ever having a blog and comparing the dictatorship of living under a household with my biological father to a militant regime and undercover operation aimed at trafficking children, I’d probably shrug my shoulders and be like, “I bet there’s a reason I do that.” I’m well aware of the concerns of going too in depth in psychoanalysis and implanting memories (we’ve all yearned over Joseph Gordon-Levitt during Inception, I’m sure), that therapy doesn’t work for everyone, that some people attribute psychology to a field of fallacy. That’s great. Start your own blog and YOU write it if you want me to touch on that. 

I, however, would like to normalize being able to talk about the experiences that shape you in life as a person and drive your passions, emphasizing what we LEARN from those psychoanalytical depths, even when it’s not pretty. 

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Our culture in the USA reveres the history of our nation’s success. We wave our military pride and justify that, because we overpower other, significantly smaller countries, through forced intimidation and keeping conflict on their own territory, that we shouldn’t have to address the cultural unrest or criminal injustice within our own borders because we had “bigger things to worry about.” We call protestors of Black lives matter “privileged” because “they should be grateful they even have the TIME to protest”. We call our healthcare workers “heroes” while simultaneously making their jobs harder by feeling the NEED for exquisite sushi because “you have to stimulate the economy” and passing legislation that makes a global pandemic a bipartisan issue. We took capitalism and inserted it into our government such that politics is now a “retirement plan” for those whose jobs are arbitrarily designated as “more important”, and thus, more financially rewarding, when in reality, those people were likely responsible for only a few years of actual labor before moving into abstract thinking and having dozens, hundreds, or thousands of people funneled into roles under their control and because we attribute hard work = financial payout, the fact that they likely had the funds to control every aspect of their life’s narrative is negated because “they struggled too”. We took obsession with celebrity culture and materialism and idolized it in such a way that reveres Elon Musk for his conspiracy hoaxes on the coronavirus pandemic, even though the guy’s genius is limited to the realm of engineering, because somehow him being a billionaire means he would have the best interest in the world at heart, even though the very fact that he’s a billionaire means he’s capable of understanding how the country functions well enough to exploit it and selfish enough to not care about reinvesting it in his community…but at least he got rid of all twelve of his homes recently. 

Is it REALLY such a surprise that the global pedophilic ring of Ghislaine Maxwell and Jeffrey Epstein was operating with frequent U.S. citizens and is well woven, tangled, dreaded into the political regime of the country? And, again, how the fuck do you think a guy who has STILL outwardly pledged his support and “well wishes” for that woman to be innocent? Fuck Trump 2020. I cannot wait until we live in a Black Mirror-esque reality where your public opinion and ability to vote on a national ordinance can both be easily accessible and verified, as well as be mentally connected to the weight of your opinion compared to your trove of knowledge on scientific fact or accurate news sources. Bring on the “Bill Gates’ computer chips into people’s brains conspiracy theory”. The average American has a 3rd grade reading level. Some of you clearly need it. 

Let’s look closer at our history towards women.

We tell women how we want them to dress, sexually gratifying and consuming the imagery, then call them whores for dressing that way in real life or being firm and confident in their own sexual prowess and pleasure. 

We uphold lengthy prison sentences for nonviolent drug offenses or make sure to show up for court sentencing over a 15 mile per hour over-the-limit ticket on a straight, narrow, otherwise vacant stretch of highway, while excusing the physical abuse of domestic violence and don’t even bother to look for some of the women who go missing because “nobody cares about them”.

We underpay historically women-dominated fields, such as education, so that even if I wanted to teach as a career in Maryland, knowing I could be most useful sharing my knowledge with and shaping the lives of the future generations, particularly within the underserved area I grew up in just outside of D.C., the $46,000 I would make as a single female with a bachelors and what will be TWO master’s degrees…for a public middle school math program, could never support a financially secure lifestyle such that I wouldn’t have to worry that a single health scare like cancer, would bankrupt me. 

We entice women by manipulating their desperation for the attention a free $2 shot brings, then tell them they “should have expected” the sexual expectation or assault because too many men now think sex is something you do TO a woman and not something you do WITH a woman. Or that a few rounds of a $2 shot is not the equivalent of me prostituting myself for $10.

We make women feel as if their only role of value to men is for breeding purposes, yet don’t provide them paid maternity leave (because, again, the man should be able to provide for a single family in this heteronormative capitalist society and they shouldn’t end up back at work anyways). Then we make women who are incapable of supporting viable life feel guilty, as if somehow it is their fault even though it may just be shitty biomechanics. Haven’t you seen National Geographic? ALL of the elephants in a tribe help raise those babies. If one falls into a sink hole, do you think it matters who the biological mama is? No. We also make women who choose not to have children feel like they “are going to regret that choice” even though it is likely the poor availability of men, or parental figures, in their lives that have created an inhospitable environment to feel as if children are an unwilling sacrifice. (Or, just, you know, the state of the world in general and how massively overpopulated we are, greenhouse gas emissions, etc.)

We exploit themes of “daddy issues” in a way that mocks the women who have had to challenge the authoritarian bounds set for them, go to years of therapy over the the abandonment issues, foster the ENDLESS angry insinuations or societal concern that “but he’s your father, honey, you should forgive him. You only get one.” even though your disdain is going on 15 years of the 27 in your life and you feel like that is more than appropriate enough time to bury the hatchet and move on. A few years back, we reached the tipping point where he was a really shitty father for a lot longer than he was a good one, so, that’s the last I want to hear on that. 

We criticize women whose entire goal does not involve securing a husband or having children, even though them appearing more “attainable” is, in fact, an unfortunate psychological factor into boosting their opportunity for recruitment in many industries within the U.S., and since “higher up” roles are STILL largely held by white males, you have to consider that reality if you want to help infiltrate and change that trajectory for generations after you. One guy recently asked me why I talk about the burden of being single so much and whether it ACTUALLY affects my life, and maybe it’s because he’s an engineer and people expect him to be reclusive, or at the very least, nerdy enough to not be dominated by “Dating”, but as an attractive woman, it is literally the only thing people EVER ask me about. To the point where it’s obnoxious that it seems like the only thing I’m supposed to care about. Which is, again, infuriating given that I’ve helped chemically synthesize an advanced stage prostate cancer inhibitor, or that I hiked an entire mountain the previous weekend, or that I know what the inside of your body can look like, and yet, dating and my relationship status is, without fail, always the priority because “a pretty girl like you must be locked down”. 

We hear the right’s cries of “saving the children” but do nothing to actually better the environments that contribute to this exploitation–environments that largely rely on female submission, and do nothing to improve the foster care, public education, or primary care/women’s reproductive rights programs that prevent unwanted (teenage) pregnancies, raise the children that aren’t aborted or experience terrible loss, enable physical health management for improved quality of life, and do nothing to actually give back to the community in a physically present way other than the regular financial donations, because “time is of the essence” and “your time is valuable” and would rather be spent with your family, so you pay for it to be someone else’s problem and your bubble of community and faith in Jesus tells you that’s enough to let you sleep at night. Better yet, you just “save” all of these children now and yet vote for four more years of a future that disadvantages them…but at least they are alive to experience it???

But what can we do? 

Growing up in the public education system right outside Washington, D.C., I didn’t realize that my peers around the country had significantly different history and government classes in their school curriculums. The events of national history and patriotism that I was learning about were happening on the land around me. John Wilkes Booth rode across my farm’s land to get to Dr. Mudd’s house after shooting President Abraham Lincoln. Every single school field trip was the short bus ride into Washington, D.C. to whatever museum was most relevant in our local curriculum. We passed the buildings where this legislation was being passed, the votes were being held, the laws were being developed, and it felt tangible. 

This guy I fucked like, twice, over the year and a half I knew him in graduate school has a very amusing kink (no further details, even though I know he’d be wiping the sweat off his brow if he was reading this and it brings a flickering grin across my face) and has divulged his…interest…in me over the last 2 years since I graduated. Mind you, we live several states away from each other, it is CONSISTENT and patterned communication, and the guy is a fully functioning member of society for all other purposes. I’m not one to kink shame, either, so it was an insulting turn of events when he implied that, because of his (and my shared) sexual interests, I would “never be able to get into politics”. 

Sir. 

Have you seen who occupies the white house? 

Things that are normal in society and normal for a healthy, moderate lifestyle, ESPECIALLY when we now KNOW just how “normal” these things are and what the global, educated consensus on “normalcy” is, just should not be stigmatized so much. It should be a natural part to revisit our experience of things, to learn and grow and figure out what it means to be a culturally aware, healthy human. The fact that we even need to specify the necessity to prioritize this abstract theory, as if it is some “Healthy People 2020” goal. (Sidenote: Oh, Michelle Obama, you remarkable woman, I’m so sorry about this year’s trajectory.) 

Would you ever have the audacity to sit there and tell a Jewish person that they shouldn’t care about the Holocaust because they didn’t “personally” experience it? Or that they shouldn’t talk about it? Or that we shouldn’t remove the statues or symbols of Hitler in society? No. So stop telling black people, women, emotional men, literally anyone who tries to empathize and refuses to bend to this idea that the people you idolize were “amazing” and start listening to HEAR their stories. Question for curiosity, not to prove your preconceived thought. Start opening your ears to those in pain around you. 

Clue #6: Celibacy and Sexual Apathy 

My first “real” relationship in highschool, I spent 3-4 years being abused, forced to have sex nearly every day just so my stalker (“boyfriend”) in the form of “high school love” wouldn’t shank me the way he threatened to shank my male best friend at soccer practice one day. If you’re like “why did you stay for so long?” Well, a “healthy” conscious of guilt, growing up in a family that had an unequal power dynamic between gender roles, and the stereotypical “started out overly sweet and affectionate, won my emotional trust and hormonal dependency, then gradually divulged into more and more severely deranged behavior” all played a role. In fact, I used to have to take my mom’s car to visit friends I had met during track, who lived an entire county away, after he would leave my house for the day, so that when he drove by later that evening and saw mine still in the driveway, he wouldn’t be suspicious. I wasn’t allowed a myspace or facebook when it came out (which worked to my advantage because there are no embarrassing archives of me in high school) and had to tell my male friends from school they weren’t allowed to text me, because I might “stray”, which meant he’d grab and twist my arms until they were covered in bruises, but mottled with my soccer injuries you couldn’t differentiate.

… That was normal behavior to me, though. My father had ensured I had no control over the use of my own body. I watched what happened when my mother broke the rules. I watched my grandmother wince when my grandfather would angrily shout out in his sleep. I was still doing so well in sports and school, excelling as always, so why should my unchanged behavior warrant concern? Why would my parents be alarmed with the way I was treated, when doing so would highlight the trenches of flaws within their own foundation? Why should I expect, or want, anything better, or different, for myself when I didn’t know what else was out there? 

Plus, my high school boyfriend was many things and a obviously a complete psychotic nutjob above all, but there is no denying he had an incredible penis for a 15 year old to learn how to enjoy herself on. Truly, a wonderful specimen of the human body for my first “real” boyfriend. Solid girth, good length, capable of satisfying a lifetime equestrian. I was getting off, and since I was so much smarter than him, I could get around his inadequate attempts to tie me down and continued to live a Hannah Montana-esque double life of secrecy–a much longer story for a much different time.

It should really be no surprise that after years of enduring this, and even more years of deconstructing these sexual norms through several long-term, progressively healthier relationships and therapy, that I’ve now begun to struggle with my sexual identity. I can finally cringe at any reminder of what I thought was acceptable.

For the record, I have not been immune to my fair share of several unhealthy, chronic hook-ups, (in fact, I have even had to get a restraining order against one of them) but your girl appreciates her solid, reliable, I-know-what-I’m-getting dick, okay. There is a lot to be appreciated in the stability of generic, well-endowed penii as a mid-to-late 20’s woman tired of the burden of her gender. However, when I’m not in committed relationships in recent years, I tend to enter periods of complete, utter sexual apathy in lieu of even casual attempts at hook ups.

The first time, in undergrad, I cycled through a period of celibacy for almost two years while focusing on my random whim to actually see what I was capable of with track after quickly tiring of partying my freshman year. Part of that was definitely because the guy I absolutely adored (who had an amazing cock that I got to ride to my little heart’s content on and off for 8 years until about 2018 actually) transferred to Tennessee, and I didn’t care enough to find anyone else who could toss me around like the proprioception of a wrestler can, but mainly it was the “not wanting to be distracted” thing. (I tell myself, while annoyingly wondering how his dog is doing.)

Recently, I’ve been in another cycle of celibacy since May of 2019 (so roughly, what, 15-16 months?). For no reason in particular, other than “I’m not looking” and “it’s not a priority.” And whenever anyone seems so surprised by this (I suppose being capable of being sexual and sluttiness are mutually inclusive for women these days), because of the lack of clothing in my photos gracing instagram, I truly just have no patience for the explanation. 

After traveling over 5 times (woah, the privilege) to Europe (3 of those times, I was “working”, I’ll have you know), and living in Florida for 2 years, as well as the lifetime of athletic performances in my past life, I got used to being really comfortable with my body. I no longer rushed to sexualize the shape of my breasts, or the well-defined curvature of my ass in barely more than my underwear. In fact, I didn’t even think about my body when I threw on clothing that covered it. I walked down the Red light district in Amsterdam, a blonde American parting the red sea of tourists with presence alone, looking at naked girls draped across bed frames in windows and watching their eager movements, attempting to lure in the weak for a few minutes of “pleasure.” I sat absentmindedly on the beaches of La Ciotat, the pert nipples of the woman accompanying my beach chair’s neighbor out, yet on no more of a “display” than any of the men meandering around shirtless. I stared at paintings, statues, and figurines of “Feminine beauty” in Parisian, Dutch, and American museums, drinking in the subjectivity of that perception and acknowledging the cultural norms that allowed the art to exist. 

After spending time in cultures that allowed me to freely exist as who I am without judgment and with relative anonymity, cultures that didn’t value my physicality far above the rest of my assets, I began to realize how criticized I had felt my entire life. First, by my own family, then my peers, and finally, society. 

Sex, and intimacy, are one of the most difficult things that still comes so naturally to me. Even with the years of misuse and historically questionable ethics behind such acts, it is my nature to share it, to indulge it. But, I still live in a country that shames me for wanting to cavalierly discuss it at brunch with girlfriends. So, instead, I choose to flip the mental switch of apathy to “off”. If I can’t do it the way I know it’s supposed to be done, teeming with sensuality, love, passion, need, I just won’t do it at all. 

I read “The 5 Love Languages” by Dr. Gary Chapman, and, despite being relatively unamused and having more of a “no shit” moment, because anyone who has gone to therapy for years would have had that emotional insight as well (although, I guess it’s a lot quicker to learn it over the span of a few hours of reading), and was haunted by the reality that physical touch is probably one of my main love languages. It would explain why I refuse to let anyone other than those I’m super close with have physical access to me. It would explain why I would still be particularly resistant to that childhood abuse. There was comfort, though, in the knowledge that I’m fully confident, even with recognizing I physically guard myself more as a result of my childhood, that I can still allow that level of intimacy of legitimate spiritual sexual connection (shout out to that aforementioned 8 year “hook up” and the couple of others who I know I genuinely loved.) 

I, personally, can separate “sex” and “intimacy”, which is also why I am so obstinate about reducing the stigma around female sexuality, legalizing prostitution, etc, even with my history of being sexually assaulted on 3 separate occasions, states away from each other (Again, stories for another time). Preventing that has done nothing to help keep women from being objectified by society and has only increased violence towards women and allowed a country where our last election involved a choice between a rich and powerful man who sexually assaulted women or a rich and powerful women who led the publicly dehumanizing campaigns against the women her husband sexually assaulted. Both of which are reportedly attributed to a global pedophilic ring and still have significant influence in our political climate. 

Additionally, I do consider the fact that I can just “turn it off”, for years at a time, is evident of the extent of trauma tied up in it, though, or the very least, my emotional apathy, which is apparently fairly abnormal for a woman but, thanks to reddit, is reassuringly normal for the 1% of ENTJ ladies who understand my pain. The ease at which I transitioned into exploring my sexuality, even with being too scared to explore my own body personally, the lack of concern or awareness for how severely unhealthy those early relationships were, the knowledge of what to do even with no access to anything remotely similar to the playboy magazines my older brother was provided, a strict ban on all “American Pie” movies, draws the question of where in the fuck and when did I learn this stuff? If it really was all from natural bodily functions and emotions, why do we make it seem so bad? What is the point? 

Clue #7: A Sexual Identity Crisis

As a historically heterosexual female questioning my sexual identity for quite possibly the first time, it also begs the question how do I know that I am actually heterosexual? I would gladly bring in sexual partners of any gender to a trusting relationship, so does this desire for exploring the bounds of physical pleasure make me “wrong”? Does it mean I’m inherently attracted to them even if I have never given thought to how I view these potential “additions” in anything other than a sexual capacity? Plenty of other species of animals are polyamorous, so why do we assume humans must be? In Ancient Roman mythology, men took up male sexual partners after marrying. Why could I not do something similar? Why are all of the men I’m attracted to so sexually repressed that it borders on homophobia when I suggest trying something new? The fads of sexuality, at least those along the East Coast and perpetuated as “stereotypically [white] American”, are tied heavily to heterosexual marriage “norms”, and thus, legality…yet those societal acceptances wax and wane with every “revolution” or isolated civilization in history. Who am I to judge what I believe in, then, without at least trying it once? And how have we not yet learned, with the internet and freedom of information, to be much more moderate of perspective in a country founded on freedom? 

This premise, though, is far more complicated when you introduce themes of an extensive history of both physical and sexual abuse into new interactions with men. It’s extremely difficult to feel the security, companionship, and safety of a healthy relationship when my mind immediately categorizes every man into a filing cabinet of “Warning”. Every interaction with their “species” is now carefully reviewed–lest I make the same naive mistakes I made for YEARS when I “thought” I was in love before. Every accidental touch in a bar, every seemingly innocent catcall, every overlap of their body so it invades my personal space never appearing across my face as “awareness” but being mentally noted, anyway. To be fair, I’m pretty cynical towards MOST of humanity, because the average US citizen has approximately a third grade reading level, which can be a bit of a gap. So, to be clear, I tend to hold suspicion for humanity in general and not just men, we’re just focusing on men for the moment since that is the vast majority of my sexual history to date.

Wanting to enter a consensual sexual relationship to be “choked out” helps desensitize the horrific visuals of being slammed against the wall, threatened until you promise that you aren’t lying about hanging out with another guy (by a kid who got a 980 on all three sections of his SAT…meanwhile, you got a 1560 on just 2 sections…yikes). Or, how, because of your parent’s incredibly fucked up familial dynamic, you previously associated love with suspicion, control, maniacal mood swings instead of loving someone who accompanies you through the mundane activities of what actually encompasses “daily life” and now question, even with recognizing that, whether you’ll be able to healthily identify relationships moving forward? 

 What happens if your partner of choice finds out or guesses about your history, though? Let alone a history you haven’t come to terms with yourself? What happens, when, at 27, you still aren’t quite ready to combine “sexuality” and “compassion”, except through physical expression. You don’t know how. You’re re-learning as you go. 

And how can you explain that? How do you explain in adulthood that you’re investigating childhood traumas tied to your sexuality? At what point in your bumble conversation do you casually interject that the reality of your existence is crumbling around you and you’re about to embark on a mission of sexual self-discovery, so you would like the occasional use and objectification of the male body to make that a reality and offer a solid relief from your current array of silicone sex toys? Or how, despite being questionably candid, you can remain so emotionally unavailable to the receiver of the information?

How do you explain answers that you don’t, and will never, have? Nor do you particularly care to delve into because you’re just following your gut and know that you’ll figure out the right opportunities along the way? Or that, if you were a guy, you probably wouldn’t have had to worry about a lot of this? Your mind just wouldn’t even work that way? Must be nice.

An Awakening

Coming to grips with the idea that I don’t actually need to define my “sexuality” (but if I had to choose, I’d most align with pansexual), and it can just exist as curiously as it occurs, without further question, is an even bigger victory than Dolores recognizing she was capable of tearing down and reconstructing the boundaries of her own existence (to me). Although, I exist in a country where, prior to 2015, just five years ago, I would’ve had to make significant life decisions based around that definition. 

Factoring in my medical background, stigma towards the eroticism of the layers of specially differentiated cells separated into distinct layers of “blood”, “muscle”, and “skin” cloaking my body peeled away, and what remains is a young women learning how to appreciate herself for who she is, what that entails, and how she can influence the world. By physically cutting into the layers, patient after patient, within a surgical dermatology setting, to watching the concept of a “host’s” physical body being easily repaired and replaced on screen in Westworld, to crossing my own mental barriers through psychoanalytic exploration of my thought’s caverns, it became clear that there were simple, biological explanations for my behavior (and desires!), but I was made to feel ostracized by normalcy out of concern for the “taboo” labeling, much of which still existed in the medical world I was so desperate to continue forging a path in. Every male associate being assumed to be the superior by the patient when he is in the room with me, ESPECIALLY if he’s white. Every global conference where some random man would take it upon himself to share with me how “everybody will doubt your intelligence because of your beauty” after hearing your questions on a particular research topic–as if he were doing me some favor, or the irony in how he was doubting the fact that I would already know that. (I’ve watched Legally Blonde, thank you very much.) It became absurd that the most intellectual amongst us were incapable of separating the idea that one’s neural functions under one environment could exist wholly apart from the method in which a physical vessel is utilized under different conditions, and that being “professional” had to extent almost solely to repress females in the work force–whether it be criticism on the premise of dress code, extracurricular activities, or just natural sex appeal as if it was OUR fault that you were socially awkward and uncomfortable around a strong female you were also physically attracted to?  

I started connecting the realms of my life that existed in my youth as distinctly separate, yet shared larger themes. Why could I compete in a spandex leotard, running as hard as I could at a springboard, muscles clenched as I twisted, turned, and flew through the air, and have a framed high-definition copy hung up in my foyer, yet was apparently also supposed to be embarrassed if a photo I sent some random dude of the side of my body, cleverly hidden by a towel, with implications of how I wanted him to impale me, got out? Okay…congrats. It’s hot as fuck. Why are we even talking about this? Enjoy the show. I’m over 18. I’m allowed to have sex. I have more important things to concern myself with. The fact that I wouldn’t personally care about the likelihood of that happening, yet, if it were to, it would consume a considerable amount of my time, I would have to address it, it would impact my career and could even be used to punish ME, and even with being confident in myself, just the possibility of that happening contributes to the chronic stress in the background of my life is ludicrous. 

To me, there is no difference in how my body is viewed or in what capacity it is being admired by society. Whether it be sports, education, art, or sexually, I should not have to sit here and make it a topic as if it is up for discussion how I should use it. I should not have to live with the knowledge that it has been exploited likely just as much, if not more, times than it has loved. I shouldn’t have to worry about how it may be “distracting” to those paying me to use the brain it houses. I should be able to freely debut it as artistically as I wish while also being able to function as a woman with something more to offer society without that being particularly risqué.

But, I do. 

Circling back to Ghislaine… 

With each passing year, and each increase in freedom, my knowledge is reinforced that the way I was raised and the way I previously viewed my body and sexuality was not normal. Each shuddering resonation of the “Athlete A” documentary, particularly the voiceover of Kerri Strugg breaking her ankle to win gold at the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, acknowledging that “there is a line between tough coaching and child abuse” brings me flashes of breaking my own foot in three places at a horse competition, only to be told I was “probably exaggerating” and being made to walk on it for three more days! (A real, “the show must go on” mentality.) What would my grandfather have done in WWII, had he broken his foot, after all?

Then, comes the struggle every true crime addict comes to when they realize just how close they came to being susceptible to the very crimes they are fascinated with. So, when the topic turns to the realization of the plausibility that someone within my own family may have had knowledge of or access to these pedophilic rings splashed across the front page of every newspaper, (pedophilia being one of the dark threats to national security), these aren’t just statistics like also being a woman running alone on a bike path on a random afternoon. These are, instead, overlapping themes of jet setting around the world, a myriad of politics, militant, finances, power. The places and circuits and lifestyle of stuff you are just discovering that could very easily have been taking place around your naive self your entire life becomes overwhelming.

 You weren’t shielded from anything, you were hidden from reality. 

It wasn’t sustainable. 

Suddenly, the therapist’s office visits, the recurrent nightmares since I was little, the seeming insanity in memories of sleeping over the Pentagon “just for fun”, driving in the Gators around the corridors after literally being smuggled through security (this was pre 9/11), being introduced to my father’s bosses, all of the memories I was now struggling with in the identity crisis that is trying to find your place in the world in your late 20’s became that much more suspicious because I opened the Pandora’s Box that is “why do I struggle so much with my sexual identity as a self reflective, more-than-modestly confident, traditionally heteronormative woman?” 

Given that I have adopted a policy in recent years of refusing to have any version of a relationship with my biological father any longer, coupled with a Butterfly Effect of gradual disdain starting in middle school and the aforementioned technology boom from the first post, is it really my fault that the timeline becomes suspicious when I revisit old memories. Am I truly to blame for questioning the nature of my reality? Wouldn’t this have been inevitable at some point? Careful, logical analysis–the thing I’m rewarded in doing within every other facet of my life these days is what I’ve been told was a good thing?

Flipping through my family’s old photo albums, I am reliant solely on my own experience to quantify the glimpses of visuals that replay against the blackened screen of my forehead as my eyes flicker across the black and white copies lying on my bed in front of me. Revisiting how I perceived those events at the time and the subsequent method in which they shaped my life, how they still contribute to some illogical sense of guilt well into my adult life, has since come under extensive scrutiny. Would I even trust anyone else’s first-hand account of these events, if I were to get them? Particularly with my family’s history of the method at which they “handle” things and the light in which they shrug things off? My mother still reveals little tid bits of reality she hid from me, thinking she was doing me some insane type of favor. She recently admitted she knew my high school boyfriend was insane and was just worried he was going to try to kill me if she actually kept him out of our house. I tried to break up with the kid dozens of times, but she taught at the neighboring high school that he went to and would always talk about how sorry he was and how she viewed him as her son. I had to live years of my life in fear that got increasingly worse and worse because my mom knew how insane this kid was and decided to keep postponing the issue until I could move away for college versus holding him accountable in any kind of legal or even parental aspect? Sounds very similar to how the USA likes to handle our problems, so I’m not sure if I can blame her. 

Suddenly the naivety of my childhood began to peel away with every investigation into my past. My entire life, I had been suffocated under activity after activity, because I genuinely LOVE to be busy. But, what is that necessity for business routed in? As of late, I opt for the comfort of others and solitude of the natural landscape. So why am I still so anxious? Why do I feel the pressure of living up to the sacrifices of “overcoming” something? 

To date, I’ve “overcome” a lot more than the alluded familial dynamics. A tornado that decimated my hometown into a warzone, being held up at gunpoint, being threatened with a gun (on a separate occasion), having to seek out two restraining orders and walk into that courtroom by myself to hold the person who sexually assaulted me and harassed me in my apartment and the one who threatened me with a gun accountable, a long familial history of alcoholics, a family that “didn’t talk about it” because of our complex, deep military background, a local sniper threat and mass shooting drills in elementary school, numerous suicides and tragic deaths across each of my different friend groups between grades 7-10 so I went to roughly 8 funerals over a two year span in my adolescence, my biological father withdrawing into himself and mentally abandoning our family simultaneously, watching the way he talked to everyone else through the exact opposite of rose-colored glasses–seeing his “true nature” at home, the stark contrast between caring about things when they were under a spotlight and having any actual empathy towards your own family in the shadows. And the list continues growing, because these are the realities of life. 

I’ve “overcome” my stubborn resolution to never be a different person to the world and back at home for this reason. Instead, I have a methodologically presented array of ~*~layers~*~. Donkey (any Shrek fans here? …Who am I kidding…who ISN’T a Shrek fan?) can laugh, but much like an onion, I present my strictest, most utilitarian self to the world upon first meeting. The grittiest layer, harsh, covered in a little bit of dirt (after all, it doesn’t hurt anyone, remember?) With time, and effort, though, you get lucky enough to see the inner gooeyness that is inside. The guarded, beautiful light that strategically kept hidden from the world. The Evenstar of my soul, expressed in the activities I invest my time in, the talents I cultivate. Slowly, you come to realize the softness behind those layers. And not just a mildly appealing softness, but a soul so all-encompassing, flooding warmth into every crevice around it, that it’s met with a fear in the world because of the strangeness of its warmth. Characterized as a raging fire of destruction instead of a wave of uplifting magic, the perspective is disrupted and misconstrued as anger to those who can’t grasp it. 

And what, then, is the anger being misconstrued from? The truth is that all of those events that I’ve “overcome”, every visual horror carefully preserved in the archives of my photographic mind are ever present, available at my whim to be revisited. Rushed to the forefront of my mind following a traumatic car accident involving my tire popping on the interstate, spinning several meters into a treeline, I watched the history of my life replayed as simply as every movie frame during a death sequence. Only, when my car finally came to rest against the 6-7th tree I hit, I hadn’t died. 

Not even two years later, I finally have both the time and ability, in the form of a salaried summer vacation, for the first time in my life to actually just exist in comfort. Not worrying about where my next rent check is coming from, not spending the majority of my time doing monotonous task after monotonous task for a miniscule fraction of the money under the guise of “higher education”, compromising my finances at the risk of freedom, not being forced to work to live. Finally being able to, and having the opportunity, to revisit what talents, goals, desires out of the many, many that I’ve accumulated, are actually mine. 

Such a seemingly simple task if only it wasn’t shrouded with the dread of confronting years of repressed memories. And then confronting and struggling with the fact that I have still managed to flourish in a world that was not created for me, but certainly allows me more privileges than most, only to coexist across the multiple realms with no way to explain how each aspect of “you” is a great deal larger than the individual sum of its parts. 

It’s a struggle learning to balance needing to recognize and disclose the oppression when your entire life your own opinion has only been meaningful in the most superficial sense. In any serious context, your voice, knowledge, demeanor was always meant to be silent unless spoken to outside of a purely academic context. 

You’ve always had to justify your actions. People never take your extensive, meticulously cultivated education as fact–yet they’ll google it themselves to make sure, and only then acknowledge, in a tone of surprise, that you were right. 

Taking back your voice, however insane or complicated or delicate those thoughts may be, is important for healing. 

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EPILOGUE:

Prior to quarantine, I’d been developing a novel that dives further into the events listed above and how they help me connect with the communities around me. With the global pandemic finally acknowledged by our national government, though never sufficiently addressed, it seemed imperative to create a space where I could delve into creative writing on the topics of passion woven into the news. It felt strange having two completely separate works of writing that I wanted to eventually put forward, however, particularly with the stigma of what it could mean to my family. 

Then, in August, Taylor Swift released her latest beauty on the world that is “Folklore” and she mentioned feeling as if “you should project the art you make onto the world” (or something along those lines). 

If I always wait until I hit certain milestones or goals to take initiative on things, then they may never happen. I know, first hand, how quickly the timeline of your life can significantly change, so I started following more impulsive whims. My “story” is a part of who I am, and, while this is certainly a satirical and dramatized version, it is also how I’ve interpreted the world as a woman (and none of what I’ve said is a lie). I don’t want to be ashamed or afraid of the things that have shaped me. I also don’t want to hide behind a curtain and feel some political necessity to present a different version of myself to the world when we as humans should encourage growth and learning and retrospection. 


This will be the last of the Ghislaine themed chapters of my familial dive for now. The blog will transition into public opinion, investigative journalist/epidemiologist pieces as I see fit.

In other words, I will do whatever the fuck I want.

Ghislaine Maxwell Pt. 2

For part 1 of a satirical trilogy into the wonderfully cozy home of familial warmth I grew up in, read this first

The Middle Child

Foreword:

The first introduction into this rabbit hole of my increasingly complex family dynamics was only the tip of the iceberg for the realm inside my head. There is a reason I prefer my solitude now, and it’s not because of my warm embrace by society as a child. I scorn the physical restraint of hugs, save maybe a handful of individuals, not because I was taught how to be comfortable in my own body and interacting healthily with others. 

The main reason I don’t succumb to the pull of substance abuse disorders, mental breakdowns, and the crushing weight of knowledge that my species has single handedly destroyed this beautiful planet beyond recognition, unlike so many of my relatives (and the rest of society), is that I’ve gone out of my way to secure and prioritize my mental health… only through a combination of pure stubbornness, the resources to learn beyond my environment, and the willpower to educate myself on it without feeling a stigma to repress or be ashamed of it. 

Much like the opening scene of Euphoria, when Zendaya’s wonder that is the character of “Rue” is brought to this reality, her mother addresses something along the lines of how “plenty of successful people had [childhood depression].” A montage of Vincent Van Gogh, Sylvia Plath, and Britney Spears having psychotic breaks or committing suicide proceeds to play out. Even Albert Einstein struggled with depression, and as a scientist, it’s scary to study the reality that my increased intellect is also the potential reason for my anxiety. It’s scarier, though, to realize that in the 21st century, I now have a platform to be able to share my stream of consciousness and document my fears, my concerns, and my emphasis on the power of mindset and I’ve somehow been gaslighted by my own family, friends, and part of society to think I should shelter it like a lighter’s flame on a windy night behind your hands. 

I can’t delve into my hopeful, still incredibly early stages of my public health and legal career, arguing over the ethics and stigma attached to certain topics–historically trending based on cultural premonitions, while shadowing the recesses of my own mind, struggling with the very same concepts. I can’t be worried an online presence will criticize my future career paths, when those same career paths will eventually involve advocacy…and my passion for advocacy is rooted in those very personal experiences I wish to explore. I can’t be afraid to have to address the skeletons in my own closet that may one day be dragged out, paraded in front of me, or for some reason used against me to involuntarily commit me to a 5150 hold, or worse…invalidate my opinion in a male-dominated public setting. 

My friend Bill once told me how he thinks my generation’s greatest strength is facilitating open conversation. 

Part of that involves having an honest conversation with myself, first. 

And believe me, I have had several years of (unfortunately) honest conversations with myself where I hold myself under scrutinizingly-heavy pressure and unrealistic expectations under the premise of “I should’ve known better”, so this isn’t about the fact that I need therapy. This is about the fact that I use writing as my preferred form of expression, and I want the people in my life moving forward to understand what I care about, why I am the way that I am, and how I actually feel underneath it all. You don’t write about the things that are easy. 

So why do I need to do it? 

Honestly, because I’m exhausted from not feeling able to. 

Years of verbal, emotional, and at times physical, abuse, all at the hands of my biological relatives. Cycles of substance abuse and behavioral patterns that are transgenerational–fully acknowledged yet never addressed. 

Years of every new person in my life expressing some kind of pity, or sadness when the topic of family comes up or if they innocently ask what I’m doing for the holidays. Until, finally, it’s just easier to say “I don’t have a family” than to explain that mine just doesn’t, and may never, understand me. 

Years of trying everything else. Therapy. Meditation. Yoga. Running. Lifting Weights. Creating a list of things to talk about. Setting boundaries. Working on forgiveness. Somehow, it all gets thrown back in my face (a spiteful “You need therapy!” as if that is actually supposed to be some kind of insult… Hey, news flash, buddy… MOST PEOPLE NEED THERAPY, not to mention this may not exist if any of y’all had ever actually gone to it yourselves instead of taking your mental handicaps out on me in real life.)

Years of it being portrayed as if I’m the unreasonable one because I’m the only one who outwardly has a problem. Everyone else can carefully avoid topics that may set off the avalanche of dismayed self realization, but I’m the only one who hasn’t been able to. I don’t smoke or drink away my problems, forgetting about how I physically attacked my sibling in my early 20’s thanks to a few rounds of watered-down shots. I don’t refuse to apologize and instead just show up absentmindedly a few months later, hoping the other person had forgotten the things I previously said. 

I am simply not willing to pretend like these things didn’t occur, or didn’t exist, because I have had to live with them for that long, without a choice. But, I’m not trying to summit the hypoxic graveyard of Mount Everest by myself. I don’t need to carry this alone. I could, but it’s not necessary in this day and age. I can bring an oxygen tank. I can bring a sherpa. But people need to know that’s where I am in the world. 

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For the record, I’m also tired of trying to weed out the newcomers who are ACTUALLY interested in learning about “me”, in whatever sense or capacity is available to them, without wasting my own time, and as of my past decade I tend to live in a new state every 2-3 years because of my career goals and honestly, I really don’t want to have to constantly retell the same exhaustingly intense theories for the rest of my life, but “normal” people can talk about things like family, career goals, values in life, much more casually.

Again, not exactly normal here. (Did you read the first post?)

So, whether it be professionally, athletically, educationally, whatever, I am actively working on making myself more available mentally, because clearly, emotionally I can be fairly checked out.

To be clear, yes I am stating that THEY (newcomers) can waste THEIR time reading about me, so long as I don’t waste my own. 

#JustENTJThings (Go look up MBTI)

Anyway, let’s Recap…

Short summary of my initial post is:

  • My grandfather and father are terrifyingly intellectual men in fields of military strategy and all things aerospace engineering (i.e. missile/weaponry development)
  • I was “trained” as a small child, and while my childhood was incredibly wonderful in a lot of ways, there was also a lot of navigation of stress in various forms
  • It’s possible that ‘training’ was some discontinued CIA-program to eventually sell me off/push me to gather intelligence and subject my body to whatever was necessary in my pursuit of knowledge in how the world works

So without further adieu, let’s continue…

Clue #4: Debutante Themes + International Diplomacy

Did any of you ever watch “She’s The Man” and relate to Viola Hastings’ disgust at her current situation and understand just why she was so frustrated? When Jo March in Greta Gerwig’s 2019 rendition of “Little Women” cried out in desperation of being so lonely, but wanting to be respected even more, was your initial reaction to undervalue her feelings? When Arya walked away from Gendry’s promise of a ladyship and land in season 8 because “that’s not her”, did you cheer? Feel a sense of pride? 

You likely felt compassion, empathy, an understanding of who they were because the backstory of their character arc was available to you. 

So when I refused my mother’s repeated advances to present myself to society via a debutante ball and cotillion, or when I decided I was going to join the football team AND be the top runner for cross country AND play varsity soccer in high school, or when I was one of the only women out of ~15 students out of a class of 22,000 undergraduates to graduate from a top 5 public university in one of the most difficult, male dominated degree fields available, when does my validation come? 

And where does my validation come from? Do I value the opinion of the family members I honestly can no longer respect because of the repeated nature of our adult encounters? Do I value the opinion of the supervisors who just yesterday sent me home because “while my outfit meets all technical criteria of the dress code, your legs are too tantalizing”… underneath your desk… in South Florida… in the middle of the summer? Do I value the opinion of the men who admired all of my virtuous aspirations initially, only for my independence to slowly become a deal breaker due to their own insecurities, causing them to stray? 

Fuck that. My validation comes from myself. 

I’ve always been this “difficult” of a person. I was five years old the first time I ran away and I distinctly remember packing my bag in spite (at my father) and holding my cat comforter up so the edges wouldn’t drag across the dew-laden grass as I crossed the street to my Uncle’s house. But am I really “difficult”? Or do I just question the subjective confines of my world because I know I can? 

And how do you present yourself to society when you don’t enjoy it, or it feels like a facade to do it in any artificial way? 

I had no interest in curtsying, learning how to delicately fold a napkin across my lap, or waiting on a male partner to escort me out into the world, even in adolescence. The cotillion angle, try as my mother might, was never going to happen. 

She should’ve known I wasn’t one to conform to gender norms when I took TWO boys to the third grade spring fling. In my defense, I narrowed down my choice from the entire male class, who had each given me an extra valentine (seriously, I peaked early as fuck) to just the two most popular boys. Chris Parker’s mom even picked me up and then drove to pick up Madison along the way. (Also…thinking of these instances then reassessing my previous, completely “unrelated” sexual preferences these days in quarantine is really that much more amusing). In fact, my entire third grade year parallels “me” as a human, in general. The presidential physical fitness test became my bitch, and the ten measly pull ups I had to do were nothing for my 100-pull-up, 100-v-up nightly bar routine that had to be completed before I could leave to go home from gymnastics…at the end of a 2 hour practice. One day, I got bored in gym class and was literally just allowed to stay in gym the rest of the day and hula hoop to break the Guiness World Record at the time, purely just to prove I could. My best friend fed me chicken nuggets to my outstretched palm during lunch. I even won the talent show later that Spring in an incredibly itchy, fuzzy Limited Too blue sweater and red skirt while belting out “The Star Spangled Banner” after first dedicating it to my three-time war veteran of a Grandpa (front row, in the audience) while my Grandmother, the hometown angel who played the organ and piano at every local parish and theatre club, accompanied me. Seriously, though, why is who I am these days and what I stand for STILL surprising to literally anybody who grew up with me. 

Once it was clear I had no intention in conforming to being a “lady” of society, other tactics of securing my status as being worthy of another person’s admiration took hold. My aunt’s job, working for some privately wealthy multimillionaire based out of D.C., took her all over the globe. Once I turned 18, and could freely travel with her without raising parental concerns, she took me with her to Rome where I spent 10 days exploring the city with an Italian Air Force Chief of Staff’s son, also my age, who was attending school overseas due to his father’s station. Later that summer, I was asked to accompany a 24 year old Australian diplomat’s recently-college-graduated son to a private dinner. The age gap and request wouldn’t have been weird…except for the fact that I both had an (abusive) boyfriend of several years and had never even been to college yet so what the heck could a small-town girl who ran against her best friend for queen of the county fair as a scholarship competition possibly offer a diplomat’s son in one-on-one conversation over a single night? With my dad, it was the men from base–whichever colonel, general, second lieutenant, whatever the fuck rank of marine, navy, or army man it was that day blending together into indistinguishable introductions, exuberance over how lucky they were to finally be introduced to me, the lust and intrigue behind their gaze obvious to anyone with half a brain. 

Those interactions certainly weren’t all bad, though.

I was the only youth at a five-course meal with multiple four star Italian generals. So, even if I was only there as a pretty face that could hold a conversation with the military men being honored, being fed cherries hand picked from the owner of the estate’s private groves, perched atop the roof top balcony overlooking Rome, at least I was there. When I was 21, I even had the opportunity to stay at the home of my dad’s long time friend, a former Marine-turned-oil-industry (conveniently right around the early-to-mid 2000’s…) man in Houston, Texas while working at the top cancer research center in the world for a summer! So, even if the man’s 23 year old athletic, blonde girlfriend “wasn’t comfortable” with him being in his own house when I was present , at least I got free use of the extra BMW, a pool with one of those motors that lets you swim in place, and prime real estate in Houston, Texas for free.

Not everything was a manipulative set up of any kind, and one could argue that life in general is about opportunity, so the more opportunities these equally curious and almost imaginative interactions earn you, the better. At the very least, I have a deeply complicated and interesting life story up until the current age of 27. But when your entire life has been centered on graduating college with virtually NO expectations set for you other than settling down and marrying a man, it is really difficult to not feel a hot flash of anger when they seem to ONLY happen, LARGELY because of your looks (which, again, up until this point, was a thing to keep modestly) and because the idea you might be happy, or fulfilled, on your own, seems absurd. It’s even insulting, most of all, because instead of not wanting to be distracted or undervalued after a string of shitty relationships, I’m apparently not allowed to provide myself time to relax and put myself first, because they’re worried that my “biological clock is ticking.”

For the record, looking at the facts of how my Grandpa didn’t believe I should have the right to vote AND TOLD ME SO, I grew up a farm girl riding my ponies over my acres of tobacco and hay fields, and my childhood consisted of glorifying the military prowess of egotistical men who feel a need to claim things (land, women, animals) for themselves and white colonial history, the emphasis of my place in society as a woman was probably one of the least shocking things I still feel residual pressure from. (Truthfully, I’ve even developed a bit of a kink for men in civil-war-era attire, which could just as likely be from Damon and Stefan Salvatore gracing the screens of my Netflix bingeing as lustful vampires, both secretly enamored with the same girl (a common theme in the entertainment I am drawn to, you’ll find) as it is due to my desire to enact some decades-later control over my own militaristic childhood in a Freudian version of sexual empowerment.)

As each year passes, even into my late 20’s, their tactics have only gotten more obvious. I’ll come home from running, sweat dripping off of each limb, glistening across my sternum, darkening the fabric of my sports bra, to a strange couple standing in my mom’s foyer, their conveniently-similar-in-age son just happened to be accompanying them to check out my mom’s bike. I get pestering, frequent insinuations that I must be a lesbian, since I don’t want to bring anyone home for the holidays (and I bought a Subaru) so strongly that I refuse to even consider the fact that I could even potentially find women attractive just because the minor chance they might be right is too infuriating that I just mentally have never allowed the question. 

But why do I care so much? 

What about their dismay at my happy solitude is so insulting to me? 

The fact in this life is whatever I achieve in life may be undermined by the lack of a male partner’s presence at my side. Sure, times are changing. Things are different now than they used to be. But the thoughts are still there. Whatever degrees I earn, jobs I hold, whatever a career looks like to me, will somehow seem sad, or lonely, if I opt to do it alone, whereas the male equivalent is revered and nobody asks whether you think you’ll regret focusing on it ten years from now (because, biologically, time is on your side so it doesn’t matter quite so much). If I had a dollar for every time one of the patients at my surgical dermatology job asked what was “wrong” with me because I wasn’t married yet…even after asking about my degrees and lifeplan, I may have been able to afford to stay at that job. If you think I’m exaggerating, and that “it’s not THAT bad anymore” “progress is being made”, explain to me why Emma Watson claiming she’s “Self partnered” is an ACTUAL news story. If we’ve ACTUALLY made that much progress with society, and women’s place, PLEASE justify why a single woman trying to find her place in the world and using her past experiences is pitied, constantly questioned, and statistically is at an increased risk for violence against her persona compared to her male counterpart. Has anyone ever asked Leonardo DiCaprio what is wrong with him for cycling through <25 year old girlfriends constantly? Suck my dick. 

From there, I wonder, do I actually think my family’s goal was trafficking me like Ghislaine Maxwell inevitably did to her victims? Or do I just think women’s role in the culturally relevant history to me and my ancestors just resembles female trafficking through use of legally enforced restrictions of whatever “freedoms” (or lack thereof) over my own existence that society wants me to have at that time? 

Is it just that I associate marriage with financial coercion and an abusive, controlling narrative because of my own experience, as well as the many, MANY similarly shared experiences with my friends, whereas that is just some kind of sample bias because of the environments I place myself in that draws similar people together? 

And, with a lengthy, repetitive, and globally cyclic patterns of female submission and inferiority of the sexes, arguably the one universally consistent, sociological trait of humanity, how is the concept of “marriage” any different, even in a Western country, when it is systematically interwoven with the increasingly difficult nature of raising a child, let alone multiple, on a single income, when the occupations commonly held by women are underfunded and underpaid (don’t even get me STARTED on education), and when sexual expression is still stigmatized so strongly that the “respectable” women are only those who reserve it for just their partner? 

Clue #5: If it looks like a duck and acts like a duck…

Speaking generally, the leaps between abuse are more of a mild hop, a casual stroll, a mindful gap. Remember those “slippery slopes” your parents spent hours warning you about? Domestic violence, sexual assault, sexual coercion, physical abuse, one tends to lead into the other and they don’t end up feeling that dissimilar from each other. At some point, it becomes a muted blend of apathy. Look up virtually any chronic reoffender in our criminal justice system–a system which HORRIBLY discards women, let alone children, for the fucking record, which I absolutely will speak separately on. One offense right after the other, yet they’re allowed to just reenter society because “not being a threat to women” is apparently different from “not being a threat to society”. Apparently, we just exclude women (or children) when we think about “society” as a whole.

In fact, in 2008 the Supreme Court ruled the death penalty for rape of a child was cruel and unusual punishment, even though the rape in question involved a man’s 8 year old stepdaughter and tore her perineum (the skin between the vagina and the butthole…also commonly torn during childbirth…the joys of femininity. Further side note… Shout out to Chrissy Tiegen for keeping it real on the internet,though).

Do you know what I think is “cruel and unusual punishment”, though?

Having been sexually assaulted multiple times, I can tell you right now that I’m going to be a dramatically changed person because of it. I have to actively work really, really hard at being a better person every single day because the reality of that, coupled with my PTSD, has provided me a cynically realistic view of the world. I know it will likely impact me the rest of my life, and I’ve learned to adjust my mindset to accommodate at continuing that slow, but gradual improvement, but it’s incredibly difficult in a country that does absolutely nothing to rehabilitate these offenders so they’re less likely to recommit, but also refuses to remove them from the gene pool, while also making it difficult for us to even access proper, affordable, and regular mental health care. It’s a system that has facilitated financial success and power for extorting the broken pieces for your own monetary gain, however easily, quickly, and long you can do it without being held accountable.

For the record, we could very easily look to European countries like Norway perhaps, who have some of the lowest crime rates and lowest rates of re-offenders with their prison system globally, so they must be doing at least something of minute importance we could take note of and try to apply. Marital rape wasn’t even a federal law in the USA until 1993! The year I was born! A man could rape his wife mercilessly, and that was completely cool.

Yet, you mean to tell me I’m not supposed to fucking talk about this? Or that I shouldn’t draw on personal experience to fuel the hell fire that is my career trajectory… or worse, it’ll ruin my chances of finding a suitable man? L M A O. I should just wait in the shadows until I MIGHT be lucky enough to actually be successful before I share it with anyone? I should be content with watching the uneducated cucks (actually, I should stop using that insultingly. Nothing wrong with that if it’s what you’re into) on CSPAN make policies affecting my livelihood and body and NOT use my social media to draw attention to this?

Much like Lady Gaga, I, also, am fueled largely on spite.

My desire to help society is not so much founded in my love of people as it is in my hatred for shitty people. (Emphasis on PEOPLE, and not just MEN, ahem… my hatred is not one-sided.)

In the USA particularly, at some point our values of what it means to be a decently good human being became vastly overshadowed by obsession with material wealth and consumerism, and it grosses me out just enough to keep me an active member of society, intent on trying to minimize my own ecological consequence and appreciate the wonders technology allows me to enjoy with ease, instead of moving to an island as a biologist for the remainder of my days much like the remarkable tale of Eloise Wehrborn de Wagner-Bosquet, the Galapagos baroness (this story also, coincidentally, involves multiple male lovers vying for their Paramore’s affection and was brought to me by the best murder square out there, Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark.) On a related note, I saw a meme today that said “I’m the granddaughter of the witches you couldn’t murder” and I felt a warm fuzzy feeling in my chest, so there’s that.

Because of this stress on outrageous materialism, it also makes sense that the entertainment industry really funneled the Me Too! Movement into what it is today, since objectification of women is most blatantly obvious when women’s bodies are figuratively and literally, replaceable, malleable, and directable. There was also no denying to the public JUST how influential those acts were in directly securing the positions or roles under question, because the financial incentives were publicly available information under each Wikipedia page for whatever film’s title or the IMDB for the actress was readily accessible.

Yet, what has come out of that? One creep remains in jail? The victims have to sign documentation preventing themselves from going public if they want any hopes of the financial pot? (But it’s too much money for our work-to-live country, so no matter how heinous the crimes actually were, the appeal eats away at you, justifiably so.)

The reality of our government’s refusal to acknowledge social justice issues like systematic racism, cycles of poverty, violence towards women, is because those topics will ultimately turn the conversation to criminal justice reform. The individualistic, greedy nature of capitalism will be called into question further and further until it can no longer be ignored that we aren’t actually creating a safe, secure zone for our children to grow up in. Instead, we elect those members to seats in our government, we revere them as well-standing members of the community, we reward them for the triumphant accolades their daughter’s garner as if it was their mind doing the work, or sprinting through that finish line. 

So why do I have so much overwhelming passion-induced anxiety, a NEED to devote myself to acknowledging and addressing this? Why can’t I just let these intense topics fade in the archives, diving into the new headlines like the average American citizen? Particularly when it seems like my life is relatively decent, well-adjusted? I “turned out fine”, I “should stop whining”, “how is this even relevant to you”, “quit being dramatic”. (If you’re thinking that right now, though (aka probably my family), let’s take a collective moment to acknowledge the fact that you’re mentally bitching about me, but still spending the time to read this. Stay in your lane and just hate in silence, for all of our sakes. Kanye West has taught me that no press is bad press (or does that only work for men?) and even if this blog ends up imploding in a 2008-era-Britney-Spears-headshave-mental-breakdown, read the caption… “it’s COMEDY!” (I hope you read that in the voice of Alexandra Cooper from Call Her Daddy). 

At some point in the mental process, you realize you enjoy learning about other’s stories, historically, in my case, all aspects of true crime but recently focused more intensely on the victims of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell, because you find solace in their shared understanding of torment. You feel a sense of relief that the world is allowing them a platform to not fade away into oblivion. That living through it MEANT something.

You take pride knowing that the normalcy of developing the skill of quickly shutting your emotions down, unreadable, the ease of flipping that mental switch so you could think solely on logic, at your most unpredictable, was developed as a result of the trauma. That you see more logically, and analytically before than ever, but are almost robotic in that sense, overactive, always scanning. 

And with said aforementioned logic, what may have just been a cut-and-dry case of the traditional, harsh lifestyle of an alcoholic farmer with a knack for domestic violence could just as plausibly have been the grooming stages of a far more expansive network of modern day trafficking given the statistical outcome of intergenerational trauma and substance abuse disorders, you just lacked the awareness at the time to notice the details. You also continue to trust in your gut, because every accusation that ever was called “crazy” by your ex boyfriends were usually pretty spot-on. 

Because just the very idea that You, someone who tends to not necessarily lead with empathy, becomes overwhelmed with this physical need to devote your life to addressing these issues, even though you’re likely setting yourself up for a lifestyle of cyclic relative loneliness, repaying debt, and investing in your education as a desperate hope of bringing a sense of understanding to your own mind, is such an insane concept. That you’ve been bullied into believing dreams of professional degrees, a gap year to enjoy life at your own pace renders you selfish beyond repair and “wasting your life” because the very idea that you could want more of your life than to marry and have children was blasphemous and somehow insulting to them? But, sure, Ricky, I’m a real “Dr. Death” just because I aspire for a doctoral degree and a lifetime of happiness with my chosen family that actually “gets” me. Fucking sue me for wanting to do more than vote idly by the rest of my life even if it means that I’m poor and cry every so often if I’m helping others. I still struggle with the insinuation of acknowledging abuse at any level, particularly because the distant ringing of “Go ahead! Call CPS! See how much better you like the foster system!” I heard my father repeat all too well lingers at the connotation. But, at some point in therapy, you just have to get over the hurdle of what your brain is refusing to allow your mouth to say and blurt it out. 

In public health, the most important factor of any initiative is stakeholders–the people who care so passionately about these issues because it personally affects them enough to want to make a difference. It draws into question my own passion. Why do I care so much about it? Why shouldn’t I just be content with a nice little, modest suburban home and ride the coattails of my privilege to stability, throwing money at a GoFundMe as needed and feeling good about myself? Honestly, I don’t mind those people at all, as long as they’re using their awareness to create conversation in their own households. But why would I not be happy with that? The answer is simply that my own experiences of sexual violence, physical and emotional abuse render it necessary for me to reevaluate the sincerity of these feelings. I’ll be the first to admit it sounds ludicrous, but much like that list of similarities between Lincoln and Kennedy that floats around the internet every few years, there are undeniable overlaps and I can’t deny the desperate, almost illogical emotional needs working as motivators throughout my career, insurmisable in any other sense other than “I REALLY wanted to [do that].” 

Psychology and the State of the World for Women…

Uncovering the extensive network of trafficking (underage) women (children) that was/is Jeffrey Epstein’s world requires knowledge of just how these actions affect the “survivors” who live the rest of their lives in fear. 

My reality is that imagining the type of fear, shame, and residual trauma those women must feel causes me to revisit my own distant, lingeringly painful memories tucked away under lock and key . Even though I had “long forgotten” some of these issues, keeping them placated in the background by an overwhelming amount of business, I still filled that busy time by studying the body (perhaps making that choice subconsciously?) and subsequently coming to understand how these things that encompass my timeline have literally changed my own physiological and hormonal chemistry, for better or worse. Each new paper on PTSD treatment, the physiological effects of chronic stress, seminars on interdepartmental learning offered clarity. That clarity, though, doesn’t, and won’t stop me from changing from running on my favorite rural, countryside trails to well-populated, publicly-surveilled paths for safety and comfort, even if I hate the pavement, need to carry my phone, and longer drive. Nor does it keep me out of the gym in the off chance that somewhere down the line, I’ll need to fend off an attacker, and want to be physically capable of holding my own if so. So, whenever news of something as insane, outrageous, and despicable as human trafficking comes up, the conversation inevitably turns to mental health, forging a “new normal”, and actually vindicating it means acknowledging those people didn’t have a choice at some point and they can be a “victim” and simultaneously want acknowledgment, crave communities of mutual understanding, and facilitate growth without that defining who they are or making them helpless. 

“Justice” after these events, if anyone is actually held accountable, also has many interpretations, but ultimately involves subjectively deciding on an “unequal but relatively fair” sentencing in repentance for some previous ideology, action, or thought. Part of establishing a “just” punishment involves understanding the mentality, the thought process behind the actions. The reasons people traffic women and young girls, though, is the same mentality that applies to the rich’s necessity to acquire any other tangible good. In the game of life, women, along with everything else in the USA, have a price, and can thus be owned.

Only, in the USA, we’ve outlawed prostitution, we’ve injected Christian virtues into every vein on our body in such withdrawal-laden intensity that we overdosed our government and local culture so nudity, the female body, and sexuality are still taboo in that, we can at least vote (between two shitty white men who both want to or have historically participated in making legislative dictations to our bodies, using their views on what rights we “should be allowed” to have as political strategies) but WOMEN ON ENTERTAINMENT PODCASTS ARE CRITICIZED FOR TALKING ABOUT SEX. The “is there no privacy!” argument gets thrown around even though these women are literally talking to their friends from the comfort of their own homes and putting it online, but MEN who talk about it freely and have been doing so for AGES, literally since men first got together and decided they would unionize, (there is a REASON Game of Thrones depicted the wildlings, an interpretation of feral humans, as metal as nature in a nomadic world as savage creatures, humanities stripped comparatively even to mythological renaissance-style times, and it wasn’t because the women were savage without reason), MEN who clearly fuck anything with legs and a vagina (and I honestly think, especially judging by a quick scan (read: several HOURS of research into) options of sex toys available to them, the legs are questionably required), those MEN get revered as gods. Their sexual charisma, chiseled body, unattainable attitude is a PERK to literally every single career they could hold.

The Kardashians get murdered on social media, even when they talk about fertility concerns, learning how to navigate raising biracial children as a parent, the criminal justice system, but y’all still support the NFL who takes a blatantly dismissive outlook on the players who beat their women multiple times. Y’all WORSHIP the turf that man walks on because his ability to catch a ball in a COMPLETELY MADE UP SPORT THAT NO OTHER COUNTRY PLAYS (and therefore isn’t even justifiable for anything outside of purely entertainment value) is more important than the fact that he ran a dog-fighting ring, or nearly beat a woman to death. Y’all glorify cage fighting and potentially beating another man to death on internationally broadcast television as a “manly” sport and justify the money as being worth the risk of permanent brain damage, if not death, or chronically aggressive interactions with families that include children. Y’all continue funding a rapper, sending him to the top of the musical hits charts, who has openly admitted to raping a 13 year old girl, JUST LIKE THE ACCUSED THIS ENTIRE BLOG HAS THUS FAR TOUCHED ON, but Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion talking about their pussies being wet during sex (AS THEY SHOULD BE) gets y’all all hyped and bothered. Ciara taught me a looooong time ago not to get worried about all that, though. So I won’t sweat it.

Destigmatizing females using social media as a platform to talk freely about their experiences as a female, the good, the bad, and the ugly, is literally what the goal of social media is supposed to be. It’s SUPPOSED to be about creating a community for people to be some version of themselves. So why do we shun it when that version is an authentically free woman? 

Creating these conversations, has secondary implications, though. The real “trickle down economics” is that destigmatizing female sexuality also means addressing violence towards women–law enforcement may actually begin to thoroughly investigate when a legally represented sexworker goes missing. 

Destigmatizing feminine conversation in general, usually coaligns with increased access to mental health resources–women LIKE talking about our problems (usually), it’s even more fun when they’re paid to listen patiently! (Just kidding about the listening patiently part, therapy is so much more than that and my therapist has worked me into some corners. Claire, if you’re reading this, 1. I am so sorry I haven’t updated you in a while, 2. Please don’t write a case study about me, I’m obviously writing it about myself and 3. You are a gift to this earth). 

Destigmatizing female conversation might also improve lives for men–you can actually understand us better, talk about your own feelings, learn about what unique and terrifyingly beautiful creatures we are at every level of our beings, and, because it usually tends to be the most important thing to you that “does at least 30% of male thinking” (according to this guy I met in graduate school), your sex lives would probably VASTLY improve because you wouldn’t be scared to ask or try new things in the bedroom, you wouldn’t be worried things could “feel a little gay” when literally it is just you and your girlfriend in the room, you would learn that if you invested even half the emotional capacity into learning our own bodies as an adult with a new perspective and learned experiences as you did to yourself when you were a kid and your dick got hard for the first time, you might ACTUALLY get us (read: females) to willingly revere your mediocre cock with as much enthusiasm as we do our orgasmic sculptures of silicone tucked inside the nightstand’s drawer. 

Of the five safest countries in the world for women, almost all have legal prostitution, for the record. Keeping prostitution illegal in the USA as a direct result of the stigma surrounding female sexuality, also keeps barriers like “professionalism” on social media and every other aspect of your life controllable by your job–holding your healthcare, financial security, home at the mercy of your supervisor. How many men do you think have formal complaints logged into their HR files over being shirtless on social media? Or in bathing wear?  (I’m looking at you, #MedBikini)

It’s the same concept behind criminalizing marijuana, but making it illegal only made it illegal for poor people.  It keeps the majority of money (and power) lined in the pockets of the rich, (white) men who control the brothels in Las Vegas, it makes women who only care about money (which is, again, COMPLETELY FINE IN A CAPITALIST ECONOMY) resort to valuing themselves at only $7 a month for an OnlyFans or $1000 a scene to be immortalized on pornhub (IF you get paid at all and don’t just have your revengeporn thrown up there!), when they should be getting PAID to allow others in their mystical sexual presence. But, because it is illegal, and there is no discord, no discussion around what our bodies are actually worth, all stigmatizing sexuality does (in a historically heteronormative society), for women, is keep them subservient to men because they can’t use all of their skills and talents to their advantage, or every communication is word-of-mouth instead of women creating businesses, hiring legal security, ensuring partners are testing for sexually transmitted diseases and using safe methods. 

Side note, in case you were curious, if I didn’t have so many hang ups because of my “daddy issues”, you better bet your ass that I would 100% let my thousands of dollars of student loans from my grad and next program be paid for by some lonely 40+ year old dude if I could legally do it and wasn’t constantly worried about getting murdered by the shady nature of it. Or even if some nerdy, rich guy somehow found me and was like “hey can you be my girlfriend for $150,000 a year, I’m lonely and want to travel the world” you can BET my passport would be the first mother fucking thing stamped. I will GLADLY be your muse if you can fund me a few years of the freedom to think and learn more about the world from a perspective I can’t currently attain purely from a financial standpoint. The happiness that comes from a business-like decision out of logic to meet financial and physical needs with someone willing to openly communicate and add a significant level of ease to your life is absolutely something I should not feel “GUILTY” for. How is that any worse than the absolutely shitty men (read: normal, average white guys well advanced in their careers and seen by society as “successful”) getting to use my body sexually, including the ones who were honestly complete shit in bed (I like to rescue animals of all kinds, apparently) who I took under my wing like a young Anakin Skywalker, only to cheat and blatantly, unacceptably disrespect me years later after significant emotional investment on my end?

My career would never just up and leave me and I would 100% fund it and my economic stability in this manner if it wasn’t one more stupid fucking obstacle to being “respected” that women have to deal with. 

Back to the point.

Female trafficking is a necessity to these people, a craving for power and validation over others, commonly to inflate the egoes of the rich. Much like the foreshadowed warnings of “The Most Dangerous Game”, the nature of humanity is to acquire power over another. Once you get bored with owning things, you want to up the stakes. The ability to view actual human beings as a “commodity”, their feelings disregarded because you think you pay them well enough to not have any. And since our economy and culture centers around money, it may be enough to keep them significantly quiet. The ability to separate reality (and even legality) from practicality, so you don’t feel guilty over the choices you make. Those sociopathic-like tendencies are typically reserved for both the world’s most powerful leaders and lethal criminals. They can flip the switch on empathy, if it’s not permanently stuck in the “off” position (sound familiar).

And who better to quantify that, than someone who has had no choice but to be increasingly aware that level of horror in the world exists.

Yet, even if you spend your entire career under a public vow to dismantle it, or at the very least actually illuminating what a problem it is and how strongly it ties into the position of women within our society, how can you possibly still be “good” when you also lack the emotional capacity to care about public sentiment when sharing it as a stream of consciousness. And there’s definitely no way you can be morally good by feeling a need to speak out, to publicly acknowledge how you interact with the world after being shaped by your own somewhat similar experiences, to even potentially profit off of it down the line? Selfish. 

Pete Davidson walked in his post-Ariana-break-up interviews so I could run on a blog.

It’s these types of questions in my analysis that make the complexities of the human mind, the memories these stories jog for me, and the importance of widely available, high quality mental health resources that much more intriguing.

For instance, I’ve heavily questioned my sexuality as a scientist, because with my educational pursuit of my undergraduate and graduate degrees, and the subsequent increase in knowledge on what “science” actually is, one comes to find that “science” is just inherently questioning the nature of reality. In medicine, you learn the biological response as to why something feels good. The chemical release, the uptake by receptors, the action potentials propagating through your skin. And yet, you exist, grew up, flourished in a world that has socially convinced you that acting on these propagations will ostracize you–even if they’re literally not hurting anyone, it’s your own body, etc. You grew up engrained with ideology that “marriage is only legally acceptable between a man and a woman”, “you should only have a single partner at a time” “marriage is controlling, manipulative, and should be for life even when you absolutely hate each other” and were somehow not supposed to rebel against it, even though the whole world was at your fingertips in every other aspect. Not to mention the interpretation of a book intended to instill and redress moral values, the stories of love, learning how to express yourself, coming of age, also condemning you to hell for biological temptations that you couldn’t stop and that, ultimately, were NORMAL.

But this was America! Women, especially white, hot, blonde women, were able to really BE somebody! It’s selfish for me to even be angry about, or question, any aspect of my previous lives because the opportunities they’ve given me proves the world is at my fingertips! Barbie had every different role possible. My Kirsten American Girl doll mimicked my Amish neighbor’s lifestyle. My cousins won “model” searches down at the local mall. My life was the set up in every movie that graced mainscreen Hollywood growing up. I even looked like Mary Kate and Ashley Olsen in my 90’s photos. That’s the harsh part though–all of my heroes were just fake characters. They weren’t based on any women in actuality. Other than sports athletes, I had no knowledge of role models that were representative of who “I” was at the time. Until “Hidden Figures” came out in 2016, I didn’t think anyone even cared about the hardships of women in STEM. Prior to that, I was only learning about men whose LIFE work I was studying that could now be boiled down to a semester-long, 3-hour course twice a week. It’s a tough thing to realize that the world you live in was not created for you. It was created for who you are physically, but you push the boundaries just a little too much because of the thoughts inside your head that question the purpose behind these technological advances and societal values when they don’t seem to actually improve our lives enough to allow us to slow down and enjoy the natural pace of humanity. Those kinds of thoughts don’t just create a minor ripple, even if that’s how you start out, you explode from seemingly nothingness like the Beirut explosion. 

(( Side note: donate to the Lebanon Red Cross here > ))

Mindy Kaling once had her character on The Mindy Project state, “tattling is when a young girl does it, when a hot woman does it, it’s called whistle blowing”. Yet, I don’t consider this “Whistle blowing”, in any way. Having the audacity to question my background is seen as the same “disgraceful” or a “tainted image” on my family, as if I came in blazing hot, making concrete, direct connections between the two theories. I would just like to blissfully point right back that if my family didn’t want me to write about them or go through this, mentally, then maybe they could’ve given me a little more love and support over the past decade (or even like, during the timeline for any of these events to take place so the memories wouldn’t be cloaked in mystery).

But, apparently, unconditional love is not guaranteed just by biological relation.

Funny how that works out, isn’t it.

(Thankfully, that makes it just as freely available from a “chosen” family forged from those you meet in life. For every shitty person in the world, there are just as many good ones willing to give love freely and without expectation because they never were on the receiving end of such an arrangement. They might be a little harder to find, but they’re there.) 

At some point in your research, as mentioned at the beginning of this post, you studied the trends of scientific discovery and the lives of those you were following behind–how those who came later were often depressed, unhappy with the state of their lives, the ensuing struggle with the enticing curiosity of knowledge that could topple societies. The obsession with each other’s work, the indulgence in exchange of passionate thoughts. Art and science interwoven so deeply that for you to truly achieve self actualization, you know you will have to acknowledge the passion behind it. 

And in recognizing that conundrum, you noted the actual experiments weren’t as intriguing to you as a topic of focus as the method of communication in which one pursuit built upon another. The method in which one scientific achievement spread–the blossom of communities, the growth of ideas, the ability to grow from words, and abstract concepts.

Would these scientists have been so depressed if they hadn’t had to wallow in their misery alone? 

Would they look at society, all of the “progress” stemming from their inventions, and be proud of how that contribution was mutilated (built upon)?

What about the scientists who created the atomic and hydrogen bombs? How do they feel about the state of the world these days? How much did they know, or actually understand, about the consequences of their actions? 

What’s the purpose of avidly working towards a theoretical future when you have the ability to make a tangible influence on another’s life locally, today? How did you choose what to prioritize? And how did you know doing that was “right”?

You finally had the time to slow down and watch as pieces of the puzzle revealed that the pursuit of higher degrees in medicine, law, or biological science wasn’t necessarily your end goal, though they were a means to an end. For the record, they were also logical, as you had no current plans or even prospects of marrying, no “need” for biological children of your own, and they would conveniently increase your lifelong earning potential as well as how rewarding it is to annihilate mansplainers, but nobody wanted to hear about that because their dreams of grandchildren were slowly disintegrating much like when Bing Bong faded into oblivion in Pixar’s take on explaining the importance of acknowledging your emotions, formally known as “Inside Out”.

Your end goal was the pursuit of having your voice acknowledged, heard, and appreciated just a little bit more.

And to do that, you had to start to talk. 

Was I Almost Ghislaine Maxwell-ed?

I would like to preface this by saying I, as an epidemiologist, understand that human trafficking, sexual violence, violence towards women, etc. are incredibly unfortunate issues in today’s society. Much like coronavirus, I think the issues in society are not, in fact, getting worse, they are merely being filmed. (A popular sentiment being passed around the twittersphere, according to Reddit.) In no way am I trying to undermine or sensationalize the severity of it. I am just exploring the world of memoir blogging, whilst possibly risking a breach of national security and careful scolding from my biological father (should he be present in my life to have a valid influence over my decisions), and spending the excessive amount of time available for me to freely exist while spiraling myself into existential dread with psychoanalysis of my self-proclaimed “daddy issues”. 

Much like how my favorite badass true crime ladies, Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark of “My Favorite Murder”,start the beginning of their live shows, I would like to reiterate that this is MY written word and should you dislike it you can kindly get the fuck out.

The premise of this blog will essentially dive into the satirical comedy of my life as I entrench myself in exploring the volatility of my repressed memories and psychoanalytic review of the history of “me”. As an ENTJ, epidemiologist, celebrated athlete, biochemist, and woman, I have held many roles within this world already. Yet still, I feel somewhat lost excelling in a world that was not created with me in mind and seems so resistant to change. 

Thanks to a LOT of hours of watching, re-watching, and then assessing “The Office” and “The Mindy Project”, I finally saw my personality reflected in popular culture. Historically, as a white-blonde haired, blue-green eyed, 5’7” athlete, I have physically been represented, for which I am grateful, though I was then confined to roles of helpless Princesses waiting for a handsome prince, the damsel in distress, the Fiona not the Shrek. Out of all of the compliments I’ve ever received (and believe me, not even in a “braggy” way, but there have been a lot), my favorite one was “you have a beautiful mind”. It’s difficult to get taken seriously, for all of the incredibly stereotypical reality that is the magical wonder of Reese Witherspoon’s “Legally Blonde”, when the male-dominated field of chemistry, biochemistry, and (historically) medicine, sees the energetic eagerness of a golden retriever in human form and discards it to the side, tells it to “tone it down”, tries to funnel you into a shell of who you are.

A lot of boundaries are being broken around the globe lately. For better or for worse, the average citizen also is arming themselves with the real financial currency of the world: intelligence. What the wealthy really buy for themselves, a premise cultivated by Amanda Seyfried and Justin Timberlake’s 2011 Sci-fi thriller “In Time” is just that–time. The time to not have to do the more “mundane” tasks of the world. The ability to afford less stress–not so as to say the wealthy don’t have stress of their own, but so they can afford to prioritize quality of life. They can afford to reflect. They can afford to enjoy life at the pace of their leisure–however fast or slow that may be. They can afford to sit and think without distraction.

So in a world of thought, where does a fairly introverted skeptic who walks through life like one of the elves from Lord of the Rings but feels the inner pull of Sméagol/Gollum’s cognitive dissonance fit in? 

In a world where different kinds of thought are accessible all over the world, I wanted to figure out a way to share the art that is my life that may include, but isn’t tied to, my appearance. I am well aware of how narcissistic this may come across, but frankly, at some point in one’s life, you have to prioritize YOURSELF. I’m 27, single with no plans of changing, living in Washington, D.C., and trusting the direction of Miley Cyrus, Beyonce, and Taylor Swift amongst others to put into words, visuals, and musical sequence the way I felt for years with no form of expression and the way I feel trying to healthily navigate that in a realm that finally allows us to “talk about it”. Not all of us come from happy homes with warmth and love. Some of us process our emotion through expression, learning from it as it comes and goes. 

Yet, how does one share their thoughts when their entire online presence has been, and could be, tied back to, and used against knowledge of their personal identity? When they grew up thinking knowledge of even a single red solo cup in a photo would ruin their chance of success? When their military family meant no social media was allowed in general, due to concerns over data security? When the risk of their very curious nature could also ruin their chances at their dreams? The same creativity that inspires them so artistically and has made them feel so passionately about every aspect of their life is meant to be shut off. The fluidity of events that built up to this inspired person should be muted, tucked away in a box of memories, and certainly NEVER publicly acknowledged. The very reason that one is as gifted as they are should be sheltered from the world, and from oneself, so they have to float through life ever questioning, in suspicious loneliness, in illuminated confusion. 

So, with that in mind, I want to create a space where I can figure out a way to express, benefit from, and inspire other like-minded individuals, but most of all individuals who may just get drawn in by one facet of me, to get insight to some stuff they may never have seen before, and maybe, just maybe, come out just a little more educated, emotionally intelligent, reflective, whatever. It’s not like I’m an egomaniac like Elon Musk or Kanye West and trying to play God with people’s lives, so I figure my opinion might be a little bit more rational and worth a damn. 

I also LOVE logic and debate, so please understand that I, as a chronic student cycling from career-to-degree-to-career-to-degree as I care to, having lived all over the East coast, and traveling to several states amongst the company of high-profile personnel over the years, am constantly learning as I go. I think the whole point in my career as a student has not so much been the subject matter of my learning, but rather the process itself. I never want to not be learning. 

That being said, I have studied…quite a lot. As an epidemiologist, of all of the plagues that I’ve studied, humanity is by far, the worst. Yet, as a woman (and aforementioned lover of true crime), I have a sick fascination with watching the possible statistical trajectories of my life revisioned before me. I will be wrong (probably most of the time, actually, but, as I said, I walk through life like an elf… it’s not exactly “normal”, so I will never admit it to anyone outside of my close friend group and then any random strangers on the internet who happen across this. 

Thus the birth of the study of their, and my own, behavior via dramaturgical memoir in the form of a modified ~influencer~ blog. 

Side note…why are we even criticizing “influencers”, brands, or celebrities of pop culture in general of not speaking up from an academic perspective? We should be championing it. The fact that some people are mad that hot girls are monetizing themselves in a capitalist economy probably has the same views my own Grandpa was VERY vocal of, in that women (and subsequently, myself) shouldn’t have the right to vote. 

But guess what, Grandpa! Not only can I vote, but my tastefully nude photos can be showcased on the same website as my recollections of your war stories and desperate (though incredibly cool and intriguing) search for our genealogy. 

We should be reaching out to, educating, helping those very same hot girls to take an interest in and learn about the world they’ve found themselves lucky enough to be successful in. 

We shouldn’t mock their bright colors, catchy dances or vulgar phrases because “cursing isn’t lady like”, telling them to not utilize a platform that allows that repressed creativity to filter through. 

We shouldn’t funnel athletes, people who have met, interacted, and shared experiences with thousands on a national or global stage into muting their performances, resigning them to using an armband or kneeling to be the only acceptable form for them to speak out in. 

We shouldn’t stifle the voices of women in healthcare, or the underrepresented in general, resulting in them feeling as if their dramatic passion must be quieted in the profession.

But, to understand their voices, to have access to the minds, the theory, the logic behind their choices, to really know who they are behind the scenes, the true intimacy of humanity, we must first figure out a way or it to be heard. 

_____________________________________

So, back to the premise of the title and thus, “blog post #1” (please be nice, I do not consent to any “Roast Me” Reddit posts, should any show up about me, they are photoshopped I am just telling you that right now). 

Now that I’m home, on our family farm outside Washington, D.C. in this 2020 dystopia “summer” of coronavirus, my online school is completed, and I’m no longer living in a hotel and calling people who “just died last night”, I finally have the time to sit down and think about how I feel about “me”. I’m usually very introspective as is, which you would probably guess purely from my years of experience dabbling in hot yoga.

Naturally, this introspection has now spiraled me down the rabbit hole that I was raised in the equivalent of a secret military training program, my daddy issues are related to repressed memories of child trafficking, and the breakdown of my family began when it became clear I was not redeemable or able to be used in the way I was intended (as an ornament to be auctioned off one day, as most women who marry are). 

I also quite possibly just need to unfollow the conspiracy theories subreddit because I fully acknowledge how insane this will sound. I would also like to reiterate it will inevitably be a sick, twisted level of satirical comedy and will not be everyone’s cup of tea. (If anything, it’ll be like a trainwreck you can’t possibly tear your eyes away from.) With quarantine, the investigation into Epstein, and smoking a fair amount of weed (sorry, Mom), the paranoia that I may have repressed memories over my own father revealed the following.

Clue #1: My family net of interwoven secrecy

My entire life, I had access to things most people associate with “higher society”. A naive little farm girl, tucked away from the realities of the world, a family commune with a Colonel for a Grandpa who served in World War II, Korea, and Vietnam. Because of his military background, his years spent at West Point both as a student and a professor, the horrors of reality he saw overseas, we had the security of growing up in the same house, my entire life, just outside of the hub of global affairs. Just outside of where the actual decisions were being made in Washington, D.C. Just outside of the buildings where people’s lives are reduced to the very statistics I now study, and manipulate, and have to be tasked with prioritizing at my own interest, or what I choose to “care” about that day. Just outside of where the monuments, structures, and memorials were enacted, of where history was being made, commemorated, and shared, of where both my maternal grandfather and biological father worked for the Pentagon in a variation of Aerospace Engineering, Nuclear weaponry development, and Military tactics for nearly every single major military event in US history and worked as a unit with other governmental faces to contribute to influencing the fate of the world. 

Since I was a woman, though, they didn’t think that I would be watching, or aware, of the insight freely available to me purely by an alignment of genetic cells. My grandfather’s words were some variation of refusing to share anything with me because I was a “feeble minded woman” who “shouldn’t have the right to vote” heavily juxtaposed by my biological father encouraging me to be an equal to my older brother, or any man. 

Nevertheless, I was certainly happy. I was supplied with as many ponies as I wanted, got to join the Girl Scouts, then became a Brownie, pony club! (After I came across “The Saddle Club” series in the local public library), private school, dressed up and paraded out every Thanksgiving as a turkey, and every Christmas as an angel, nevermind how much you absolutely HATED mass congregations and forced theatre. A welsh pony, chestnut brown–just like the one in my latest book, followed by an Icelandic import from Canada, showing up in the middle of the night, his bay coat illuminated by the moonlight like wet pavement. Hundreds of presents on holidays! It was never given though–no, certainly not a gift. Everything was a reward, positive reinforcement for my hours in the gym, days spent in the saddle, diligence with my reading. 

So when my parents switched me to public school in second grade, to better accommodate my transition into the elite gymnastics circuit–on an olympic development track, I also began climbing the rankings in horse competitions. Moving from dressage to showjumping to eventing, adding in games and polocrosse as easily as I added in another pony. I collected trophy after trophy, in literally everything I tried. Once one discipline got boring, another quickly took its place. The events I read about in books well beyond my grade level, devouring page after page, were actually happening for me. 

And I didn’t have to care about any of it. I was a soldier, after all. 

My grandfather saw to that. Respecting his authority was instilled deep within my being. The system worked, was rigid, was right. As long as I showed up, I got to play whatever I wanted. And I loooooooved to win. 

I had trainer after trainer freely available. A trampoline. Maybe I should pick up soccer? No, not on a girl’s team, it has to be a boy’s team. They’re more fun to play with. My identity became whatever was in front of me. And because I knew the value of hard work, knew that “talent” was a clever way of disguising hobbies as things you just decide you might like one day, and then try again and again until you’re eventually relatively decent at it, I didn’t need to question who I was. 

I collected title after title, the true value in the trophies being confined to the text engraved on the plate.  And as many achievements as I had on every soccer field, track, football complex, or horse ring in the state, I matched them, if not more, in school. My intelligence and calm demeanor floored teacher after teacher (a stark contrast to my older brother’s incessant energy). While I may not have acted out in class, I still spoke passionately, I engaged, I made myself heard in the situations I was allowed to, at every opportunity. Yet, I still only did it, when I was permitted to

My physical prowess and adaptability are almost surreal, and always have been. Academic and athletic excellence. All wrapped up in the muscular, blonde haired, blue-green eyed frame, it was scarily reminiscent of Angelina Jolie’s character’s upbringing in Soviet Russia in the movie, “Salt”. My resume was phenomenal, such that when I met someone who so obviously embellished theirs in graduate school, I was genuinely disgusted that anyone would lie on their resume. (Remember, naivety will be a recurrent theme.)

So where does Ghislaine Maxwell and our political/military background fall into this? 

Ghislaine Maxwell, news sensation, probably (definitely?) secretly dead in a cell, inevitably smuggled out, replaced by a body double from the coronavirus epidemic (some poor family of a white, brunette lady of slender build will be just another “misplaced” funeral mix-up, aye?) in a staged suicide, Kerri Washington will revisit her role as Olivia Pope on the magic that is (everything) Shonda Rhimes’ “Scandal” to “handle” it, the Cruella DeVil of child sex trafficking, you know the one. 

Well, I think it’s pretty safe to say, though also at the risk of coming up sounding like a big conspiracy theorist, that apart from Ghislaine Maxwell and other members of high society, most of the people actually controlling things on a global scale PRIOR to the big “boom”of tech with the emergence of the new millenium were the military leaders, and solely the military leaders. Prior to the convenience of having every household equipped for communication, the military and political figures were a string of name recognition picked largely by familial lineage or military prowess. If you were lucky, you revolutionized an industry and got involved with your cunning traditional academic intelligence (or just sheer luck). 

Either way, technology has made knowledge of the realities of the various currencies the world’s power is concentrated around that much more obvious to the average citizen. Money, military force, humans, women, children, bioterrorist agents, intelligence, the actual identity doesn’t matter. What ultimately matters is who the people are that can move the lives, identities, souls of societies around their Risk Boards at their discretion, and understanding that those people are generally not in those positions of power because it is an easy position to hold, or because they are morally righteous. With that in mind, I think it’s pretty reasonable to assume that nearly every single person who historically has or continues to exploit an under-serving system has a million skeletons in the closet and a million pieces of information capable of being thrown around indiscernible until the odds turn into their favor. 

From that draws the reasoning that my Grandfather, a distinguished military leader of our country, one who preferred to remain back in the shadows, secluded from the world yet readily accessible when needed, may have been involved at some point in his incredibly successful career, at using nefarious tactics to achieve a means to his end. It’s only logic that the same people pulling the strings behind the scenes, the ones actually responsible, for “containing” the horrors of the world were the military strategists. And to contain them means understanding them, studying them, being aware of them and their intricacies. Furthermore, our government, particularly our defense department, has a history of ethical concerns with their developmental training programs. 

My grandfather was a lot of things and as much as I respect (with a healthy whim of absolute horror towards) him for the life he created, I really don’t think it would be that implausible to think he may have tried to create a lineage that could be inserted into every position necessary to obtain intelligence with his own family and I was ultimately intended to be either married off or sold to the highest bidder in his circle. From that, the obvious trail of deductive reasoning yields I was likely meant to be an eventual target of Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell’s extensive pedophilic ring. 

Which, for the record, is horrific, but is not that uncommon, humans just prefer to pretend like we aren’t just another animalistic species. Instead of clawing out their jugulars, we use those big brains and opposable thumbs to systematically torture our prey into submission. To eviscerate their humanity into nonexistence and proceed to position their body as we please, convincing ourselves that they must enjoy it to some extent just because of their biological, physical reactions. We peel back the layers of emotions one by one until none exist, but delude ourselves that they have free choices, a good life, they’re lucky

And given that my grandfather (and likely my father to a lesser extent) ran in and rather LED our country through some of the most horrific infractions against human life seemingly possible, I have to argue…who, amongst them, wasn’t involved in some extensively heinous activity? Or how do you not engage in especially heinous activity when you learn to live that wildly, that savagely, that destructively? And what then, was my Grandfather guilty of? What was he guilty of that kept him desperately clinging to mortality from his bed in the veteran’s home, hallucinating his memories, for days while we held his hand? What was he actually doing when he was carted off to some random geolocation on the planet for weeks, or months, on end?

To be clear, he was a GREAT, absolutely phenomenal man, and I do in fact feel like a dick even questioning my history. Not enough of a dick to not actually write it, but the guilty premise is there. Thanks to my catholic ex-boyfriend, I was taught to just ignore that notion and pray for forgiveness later. 

Which means reflecting back on the manner in which I was raised, the trajectory of my life, the buildup of everything magically working out despite no shortage of near-death or existential crisis, the question, naturally develops into whether my own lineage, hidden in the shadows of public knowledge, should be under question? The easily-controlled (bought) narrative of limited press, of word of mouth, the altered or confidential military records, it isn’t limited to the USA. Sure, Trump is shitty and likely guilty but SO ARE LITERALLY EVERY SINGLE ONE OF THOSE PEOPLE IN ANY OF THOSE CIRCLES OF “HIGH SOCIETY”. 

…But, by design, this could include my own family. 

______________________________________________

So far we’ve connected that military and public figures (the “wealthy”) basically run the world because they have some form of power (currency) to design their own worlds. Just a few generations ago, this was decided by genealogy and luck. Decided decades in advance by powerful men in a powerful room under the impression they all possessed a premonition on “progress” in a society worthy of value. 

Then came the somewhat unpredictability of “technology”. And with “technology” came  a whirlpool of achievements: public accelerations in travel, methods of communication, massive and intercultural spread of knowledge occurring from the safety of one’s own home. Suddenly, a new trajectory broke off… the interwoven nature of the world’s rich, exacerbated and torpedoed by the USA celebrity culture, upsetting the traditional militaristic leadership of succession in our government and no longer unnecessary to acknowledge with the culmination of the 2016 presidential election. 

Any system exploitable can also be weaponized in the same sense. With technology, the same rich people who ruled the world and had been raised on the expectations that it would one day be handed to them began to be “exposable”–a threat only increased and immediately to their dismay by arming every citizen with their own way to record evidence. So what, ultimately, threatened to topple the careful succession of global progression the most? What should be exploited by those in power or desperate to achieve power? Intelligence

Intelligence. 

Intelligence as a currency is the most important long-term payout. Climate change, public health, environmental health, societal influence by mother nature and the biodiversity of the planet is how war’s have ultimately been won in the past. Of what actually gives someone the upper hand generation after generation. My grandfather knew that, and it’s why he reportedly helped change the trajectory of the Korean War. The Department of Defense, blatantly corrupt governments, seemingly smooth regimes of monarchical tradition, all of the political leaders know that intelligence is ultimately just questioning the unknown. Which is a science, a study, an -ology. 

The ‘best’ military leaders take that knowledge and weaponize it in a long-instilled survival instinct of “self preservation”. Those novel inventions intended for innocent use become weapons of mass destruction five inventions down the line.

Which makes the most dangerous asset, then, the scientists.

The one who have access to the limits. The ones who usually enjoy discreetly existing in the background, emerging from our labs to report our results to others who then go on to make the decisions. So what if you could weaponize that in the form of a trained woman, capable of playing any role given to her, classically conditioned to never question authority? 

It would be logical, at least. Only emphasized by the ever-amassing sequence of coincidences that form the tangled spider-web of my life. It’s a real-life version of the meme of Charlie Day in Horrible Bosses when he’s trying to explain how everything connects. Side note: If this is anything remotely close to what detectives do all day, I may need to consider yet another career change. Thus, I’m just pointing out that it’s a LITTLE suspicious that a beautiful blonde-haired blue-green eyed athletic fireball who is good at just about everything and now has degrees in biochemistry and epidemiology from two top ten universities and has also traveled the world under a lot of incredibly convenient situations with a lot of relatively important people may have been part of a discontinued genealogical CIA mission to develop the next generation of agents to insert into the realm of the rich. 

Clue #2: My Father 

Without getting into the depths of it, I have, what one could classify as “daddy issues”.

The frustration of being a hot, blonde, white girl who loves to test her limits both sexually and physically means that self-reflection inevitably draws me to concern over Freudian’s psychoanalytic connection with my enjoyment in being consensually degraded by men of my choice with the manner in which I was raised. As a scientist, when I study these theories, I naturally connect them to myself to increase my neuronal connective network and ability for recall via compartmentalization in the future. Despite distant hummings of “correlation does not prove causation”, that is still a debate as ancient as “what came first: the chicken or the egg?” And I fit right into the stereotype. 

My kind of sexual kinks are certainly not normal, and while I won’t elaborate just yet, it absolutely has called into question whether my fetishes are engrained into my incredibly dominant persona because of “nature”–evident by all of the home videos of me as a difficult child, or the militant, disciplined regimen of my “nurture”. When I start to inevitably become both overwhelmed and slightly disgusted by the possible reasoning behind my sexual interests, I at least find comfort in reminding myself that it’s not just my own household that, as a woman, restricts me. It’s having to explain myself every fucking time, its growing up as a trophy, some ornament to society for my family, just to suddenly have an ability to make my own choices. It’s having people be “surprised” at my intelligence. It’s having an entire group of people assume they can have a priority over me, judge me, tell me where my place is. 

Thus, the frustration in society’s obsession to connect that purely to my father is just disturbing. 

And my best friend, the person who helped me survive undergrad from literally every single year in Chapel Hill has just as complex of a relationship with her father. She, too, was thrown into the elite gymnastics world, a high society father, thrown into dance as well as gymnastics, but, unlike me, she actually enjoyed the girlier aspects of “womanhood”. She smiled in all of the photos of her dressed up, paraded around for the amusement of others, whereas I glared threateningly at every camera. 

Yet, where I explored my sexual promiscuity, she took the opposite route. A virgin in college, but an incredibly beautiful girl (this is only relevant because she’s pretty in such a way that you KNOW it wasn’t because she “lacked options” or some bullshit like that). As her best friend, we spent hours together, contemplating why she was so mentally hesitant to proceed past OTPHJ and dry-humping filled make out sessions. We also didn’t quite realize just how absolutely terrified of seeing a male penis she was until I set my friend Carl’s as her phone background at a gymnastics meet…she screamed and cried upon flipping it open. At 20 years of age. it was definitely not a normal reaction, and as we both have a truly vile disdain for our fathers, we’ve inevitably discussed at length the possibility of having repressed memories of them.

We bonded over our childhood depression, we’ve discussed our similarities in struggles at length, and taken solace in the shared experience of our increasingly distant relationships with our fathers where, try as we might, there are incessant warning lights of pain every single time they come back into our lives. So why, if it seems like they didn’t actually do anything that severe, do we feel such hatred? Such deep-rooted, illogical, survival instinct-like hatred telling us to run the opposite way from them if we want a happy life? And why does that warning sign still blare across the speakers of the megaphone of your inner psyche long after you’ve acknowledged and moved past them? 

My father was not a seasoned military man like my grandfather, yet he was arguably worse. No, he didn’t curse and scream to the high heavens when the Washington Redskins lost on a Sunday night. Nor did he down an entire handle of Hendrick’s gin each night. Instead, he designed the horrors of the world instead of directing them. Developed nuclear warheads, disappearing onto a naval ship for months at a time, out in the middle of the ocean, unreachable for days. Counterterrorism negotiation: understanding the minds of the horrible people in the world because you also think that way. Analyzing the boston marathon bomb on base, categorizing the explosion, figuring out how to recreate it. His own obsession with knowledge meant he succumbed to the novelty of leisurely cruising the internet each night instead of engaging in valuable discussions with his daughters. His preference for topical debate and need to lead his own household staunched the creative impulse in his children during their adolescence–they retreated to their rooms instead of spending any quality time as a familial unit.

It must have been a difficult balance, instilling such important virtues of independence then having that same logic used against you. Realizing your children growing up with access to more education from a younger age, more stimulation, a visual and auditory overload you couldn’t even imagine, meant that they also surpassed your plan for their growth far quicker than you were able to predict. That your inability to conform to an adapting narrative meant you were being left in the dust. 

So when your daughter, struggling to come into an identity of her own with the rush of hormonal swings that is puberty, sees you mocking your own mother, the most wonderful woman in her life, for everything that makes her a “woman”, a deviation emerges. The emotional manipulation, the laughs at her tears, the “a little dirt won’t hurt” mentality that pertained to ballfield and home life, those visuals have persisted long after the pain has receded. Unable to process the events in real time, my childhood life and list of upcoming performances always bearing dangerously up ahead, I stratified all of these instances into little filing cabinets deep in the recesses of my brain. So with a combination of coronavirus, a political election, global distress, a human, and child, sex trafficking scandal, I finally have the time to actually be reminded of, and explore, these memories. It’s a rabbit hole into who “I” am that is inevitably tied to “him” at some point. It’s inescapable, and thus, frustrating.

Add in the fact that the same man was incredibly suspicious of data tracking (almost to a paranoid level), has been talking about “China” being our main threat for well over the last decade, and would disappear for weeks on end, only to reemerge holding the empty shells of missiles shot off somewhere in the ocean…shells that later become named in the deaths of others, there is no denying that he was and still remains one of the most intelligent men I have ever met.

Which is exactly why it draws logical concern that he could have been so worried because he had something to hide. 

Clue #3: One of Just Many Family Secrets

So what type of fucked up family creates an absolute unit of a child who can ALWAYS be working, honing her craft, amassing talent after talent so she can one day blend in to literally any situation she needs to? Who has teachers not even on her schedule create time for her to learn new subjects for fun? Who naturally draws others in but keeps them at an arm’s length until she decides they are no longer suspicious? 

As I said, but somehow feel is still necessary to report, my grandfather must’ve been a great, but terrifying, man in his career. The atrocities of the missions he led in every war across multiple continents, his years living in and studying warfare in Italy, his refusal to ever discuss any aspect of his past, yet his desperation in later life to “create a legacy”…despite needing to drown out the horrors of that same legacy with his gin. He was the one who did what had to be done. He could, and did, make those unspeakable decisions. And that’s exactly what they are–unspeakable.

So how far did his involvement go? 

It seems only logical my assumption for what I was intended for.

Given the visible fear my mother and her siblings had for my grandfather, his incessant need to expand his legacy and extensive search into our heritage in his later years meant he had full intentions for our own family to follow in his footsteps–for this information to be important. I have also known for years that my mother was sexually assaulted by a long-time esteemed friend of the family, reportedly. An incident that was briefly mentioned and then shuttered back into its cage. Combined with myself, one who has an incredibly brilliant memory, now struggling with most aspects of my identity, including my sexuality, and have not had any meaningful relationship with my own father due to the somewhat aforementioned extensively psychoanalyzed cyclical pattern of behavior. And on top of all this, somehow, even though my mom didn’t work and stayed at home, we just mysteriously had the funds, for literally all of my and my siblings activities, hobbies, pursuits of interest?

The family farm we grew up on was more of a complex in the years I was alive. My parents faced my uncle and whichever of his wives was living with him at the time. Behind the pond in our backyard, my aunt’s home lay submerged in woods. Immediately to our left, if we were staring out at the cobblestone private road, a few miles off the only main highway that ran through our town, the culdesac culminates in my grandparent’s house, overlooking the rolling hills and wooded acres of former tobacco farming. Between my grandparent’s and parent’s house lay the apple orchard, where helicopters did and could land anywhere relatively discreetly. Also conveniently used as part of our horse pasture or jumping field. The acres of woods that surrounded our households, the barrier of the horse pastures, the miles of forestry. 

The peaceful home that I knew and loved as my serene oasis is now, very clearly, a fortress that allowed us to pass, excel, and grow just below the radar of civilian life in the small town. Competitive enough to challenge me but not in such a way that drew attention. I realize that our grandfather planned out the location so every terrorist attack, every civilian threat on our capital could make us reachable by helicopter in minutes. We always knew we’d be okay because there were protocols in place. And we were at least on the list for priority evacuees should the worst happen…all thanks to my him. We owed him our security. 

And my biological father was OBSESSED with reminding us that our searches were being monitored. Reflecting on this now makes me realize that not only was he monitoring us himself, but he was really referencing our data being monitored. So that the things we did, as children, couldn’t be stolen by a stranger in a chatroom. So the guy jacking off in the omegle chatroom wasn’t hacking into our camera feeds and watching our underage selves through our laptop screens, only to sell it on the web and have it reemerge 30 years later and be used to blackmail us on our political campaigns. This paranoia, yet an understandable and legitimate fear, really just fed into my exhibitionist fetish 20 years later, so congrats on the anxiety. Now I’m just navigating trying to monetize it myself and come to terms with the reality that as a scientist overlapping with education, I am not allowed to publicly acknowledge my sexuality to any significant extent, lest I be burned at the stake of some online Facebook community watchgroup. 

My father’s domineering, dismissive nature of anything that didn’t go perfectly in line with his plan–even if that dismissiveness was towards his own children– has always been something I witnessed quietly. His public facade of being this incredible asset to the community, his obsessive compulsion to be publicly appreciated, that he years later validated in your own personal success…that was never enough behind the curtains. There was always more to have. 

For me, a young woman (ugh, can it just like, not be pedophilic and ageist to refer to myself as a “girl”, I am only 27 for crying out loud) who shares the obsessive curiosity of interest in her genetic background with her grandfather, I now seek insight as to what ration went into the details that shaped my life before I was aware that I could shape my own. In the interest of global news as of late, particularly the unveiling of the Ghislaine Maxwell story, it only served to make me wonder…With how interconnected these webs are, it’s fair that one whose own family fits that complexity of secrecy could be involved in similar affairs. 

It would also, just as likely explain the otherwise inexplicable and almost insurmountable level of hatred for my father, or it may very well have just been a completely honest, small town operation. Those trucks in the night were just farm deliveries. Those helicopter landings all legitimate missions.

But still…A girl can wonder.

A girl with anxiety can spiral.