The first memories are from early age, it presented itself differently over the years, but in a way, it was always there.
The inability to sleep after a
slightly more exciting day, the array of dreams with intricate stories that
filled your days almost as much as your nights, the eagerness to belong, to
achieve, to go further.
The way you’d imagined yourself
in life threatening situations, in grief, in pain, always trying to make sense
of a world you didn’t know, always trying to be two steps ahead, always trying
to be prepared for the unpredictable. As if study life events would make you
more human, more capable of integrating a world you often didn’t feel you belonged
to.
It came early, that sense of
living a misplaced life. Often nothing was particularly wrong, but nothing was
ever exactly right either, it was always this limbo. You’ve always lived half
in your head and half in the real world, and at times that line became
dangerously thin.
The headaches started even before
you could read, to a degree that made them test you, but they found nothing
wrong. The anxiety came shortly after, though you didn’t really know what that
was. Its first showings were regarding other people, or your inability to
distance yourself from their emotions, and all the sudden you were carrying a
sense of worry that never left.
Maybe because you’d practice so
well in your dreams, you were never given to big spontaneous proclamations of emotion,
so it was hard to grasp the intensity of other people’s feelings, and even
harder not to be affected by it. Quickly, the fear of not being there when
needed became a reality that had come to stay, it became an obsession, you became
so afraid of not noticing if someone needed help that often you made things
became bigger than they really were.
You were always very realistic
when it came to fixings, you always knew you couldn’t take people’s pain away,
so it’s hard to know if all this attention to people’s pain was selfless or just
a distraction from your own feelings.
But anxiety, it seemed, had more
than one trigger, and soon it became also about yourself. Anything less than
perfection was not enough. It’s hard to say if it was environmental, because you
don’t ever remember being pushed by anyone than yourself, but that’s when the tightness
in your chest and the heavy breathing began to be a part of your life.
You started noticing little
things, how, in any environment you’d prefer to be in a corner, so you could
see, from every angle, what was going on around you. How involuntary changes to
your routine, or habits you were unaware you were repeating, triggered an irrational
sense of discomfort. How crowded places, noises or intermittent lights swiftly
altered your mood.
Nights out with friends were not
fun, because often the noise was unbearable, concerts and music festivals were
only fun when we’d get to stay backstage, because the crowds made you feel unease,
going to the movies was torture because it was unsettling to stay put for that
long, school was painful because you felt constantly evaluated and even hobbies
became harder to enjoy.
It didn’t take long to realize
that the more tired you were the easier it was to feel sensory overloaded,
there was a clear connection between your lack of sleep and your ability to
cope with the world. But that knowledge doesn’t help much when you can’t shut
your brain off or pause the world. Ironically, the less you’d sleep the more
you’d brain would speed up.
The energy it would take to just
be normal was so draining, that didn’t leave room for much else, which led to apathy,
guilt, lack or purpose and eventually depression.
You’d find solace in the quiet of
the night, when there were no lights, no sounds, no people, thought it always felt
too short.
The morning always came to soon
and with it, the weight of a life you couldn’t carry, but had no choice but
face, day after day.
Everything was a challenge,
everything felt like a life-or-death situation, even if you knew it weren’t. To
an outsider it may feel overdramatic, but regardless the logic of those
thoughts, that’s how it felt. It’s always been one the most annoying things
about yourself, perhaps, THE most annoying, this egotistical side to you, this knowledge
of knowing we are nothing in this big world and at the same time feel like all
eyes are on you, that you can’t fail or everything will fall apart.
So, you tame your emotions and
your feelings, your thoughts and your struggles, and you do it for so long that
you don’t even notice it anymore. You become good at reading other people’s
feelings when you can barely identify your own because you’ve been numbing them
for so long. The thing is, you can’t fully live if you always keep on foot outside
of the door. You can not selectively numb emotions, if you numb the bad emotions,
you numb the good ones too.
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