By CARRIE McCARTHY
Sometimes I feel like I’m the only lesbian who doesn’t fancy Ruby Rose. I know we’re all supposed to love a heavily tattooed, spikey haired lezzer with a bit of talent and a lot of fame, but that’s never been my bag.
Recently though, I could have French-kissed the bejesus out of her. Talking about her battle with depression was a very courageous way to get my attention, certainly more effective than flashing her tits in FHM a few years ago.
I’m not normally a big fan of public emoting. I’m not even really a fan of writing about my emotions directly, I’d rather let them weave into my work organically than state implicitly ‘this is me’.
Yet in December last year I stood in line at my local Coles and burst into a very public bout of uncontrollable tears. Not the sort of tantrum brought about by long queues and a shortage of cranberry sauce that’s acceptable at Christmas time, but a silent overflow of tears that hurt my throat, and crushed my chest.
I had noticed the girl in front of me was covered with scars. Long, purple lines covered her forearms in a crosshatched mess of pain, and one angry, red one travelled from somewhere under her skirt, down to her knee. I’d seen similar scars before – on a friend, on the guy who works in the Night Owl – but I’d always been dismissive of them, waving them off with a reaction that was more ‘you hopeless emo’ than ‘you poor thing’. I never understood what would possess anyone to cut themselves up, why they’d want to do that to themselves. Recognising myself in her scars definitely wasn’t in the plan.
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I read that with tears streaming down my face.
The same way you did as you saw the girl with the scars.
Thank you, you have awoken me to the problem I am having, the same chest crushing, the same silent tears.
Time for me to make myself an appointment and try and 'fix' this pain.
One "good" thing about getting older is realising how many people go through anxiety and depression.
When my anxiety was at its worst - during my twenties, I was sure I was a freak... Now I know most people go through a bout (or a long spell) of it as part of the human experience.
Meds did not work for me (I found the side effects unbearable), but I recovered and now I mostly avoid situations that I know will make me uncomfortable... Therapists will probably say this is not dealing with the issue, but it works for me. I've also learned to say no, which is key to a happier life. Coming out also took away a lot of angst.
I can definitely relate to an emotional spell at the supermarket. As my dad got older, we did our grocery shopping together each day. Then he died in 2012. I was feeling quite proud at how well I was handling his death - that was until I resumed grocery shopping...
I walked into Woolworths feeling perfectly fine - then it hit me like a brick to the head: DAD'S NOT HERE :'(
I was caught totally off-guard by this overload of *all the feelings* and proceeded to push my cart through the vege aisles with tears streaming down my face, sniffing loudly. Thankfully I recovered by the time I got to pasta. :-)
I try to have a sense of humour about these *moments*, where as before I would have hidden and felt weird or ashamed. Now I remind myself that crying just means one has empathy and is not a sociopath = it's a good thing.