As I mentioned when
examining my geekiness, I have been looking back more.
Some of that comes
from my month of thankful posts, when I realized that one thing I was very
grateful for is that I was not picked on that much. The times it did happen left
really deep scars, but based on what I was like it seems like it could have
been a lot worse.
I kind of thought
the post might bring some affirmations about why I did not get picked on much,
like maybe people would tell me I was not really that unattractive and nerdy. I
did get responses, but it was more people mentioning being bullied themselves,
or dealing with it with their children now, and it just reminds me of how hard
growing up can be, and yes, somehow I was inordinately lucky, and I am grateful
for that.
The other part
though, is with those unexpected followers on Twitter, a lot of them seem to be
teenage girls who like the same bands I like. I think I have picked up more All
American Rejects fans than My Chemical Romance fans, but I haven’t really been
keeping score. I don’t think they overlap.
Initially, I held
off on following back. I wanted this nice and orderly feed where it was not
spiraling out of control all of the time, with text-speak and parental angst
and passive aggression and little hearts and symbols that I don’t even know how
you get, and exclamation points. So many exclamation points. Still, it felt
wrong not to follow them, so I did.
I do not generally
know much about them, including ages and locations. I saw one conversation where
one apparently had just turned 13 and another is a few months away from 16.
Some of them are older. Two I think are not even teenagers. I think of them all
as being around 14, because that was kind of the key age for me, and then we
have a mirror image thing going on, because I am rapidly approaching 41.
I was trying to
think why 14 seemd like such a key age. I turned 14 in 1986. I guess the 80’s
were in full swing already, so it wasn’t that. Somehow, by 1986 maybe I was a
part of it.
Turning 14 meant I could
go to church dances, and that was such a huge part of my life. Maybe a church
dance doesn’t sound that cool, but they happened monthly where school dances
were rare, having a boyfriend did not matter, and even though there were some
dress standards, we still had a guy there who looked just like Terry Bozzio,
and another who looked like John Taylor, and I danced with both of them.
Also, I started
going to concerts that year. A-ha and Charlie Sexton were my two favorites at
that time, and I saw both of them, about a month apart, kind of like how I just
saw two bands I have really wanted to see in the last month.
Of course, 14 was
also when an unfortunate combination of teasing and sexual harassment convinced
me that no guy could ever be seriously attracted to me, that as a girl, I was a
joke, and I gave up on drama and plays, and I discovered that I was hopeless at
guitar.
That’s what 14 is
like though. Your emotions are not on an even keel yet, because maturity takes
a while, so things are exhilarating and devastating, and maybe the only thing
in between is boring. You’re learning what your gifts are, and how the world
is, and how you are, so a bad message received then is a lot worse than one
received a few years later. It’s a roller coaster, and I care about the current
riders. I like them. And, I keep remembering ways in which I resemble that
tweet, or at least I used to.
There are two
separate things going on. One is that I try to be organized and orderly, and
that doesn’t work. My following list tripled, and now there are times when I
know that someone is mad at someone else over something, with no context, and
often with language that I do not appreciate, though, hey, I follow musicians
so it was going to happen anyway. It is not orderly.
Talking about my
birthday party, I said I was experimenting with chaos. This is part of it. I
have spent many years learning that things do not go as planned, and there are
many elements of my life outside of my control. I seem to be moving from
accepting to embracing, Maybe this means that the future will also hold times
when I blog about comics, music, writing, and politics all in the same week,
rather than going through themes. Maybe it means I will start dating again. I
don’t know.
What I do know, and
this is the other thing going on, is that the other issue is that I care. I
feel drawn towards mentoring, or doing something helpful. I feel the
vulnerability of teenage girls more, but the truth is, it’s everyone. So even
though I have clearly decided and said that Twitter is not good for the
personal, I’m starting to use it more that way now.
Often, I have no
idea what to do, and I will say something encouraging but trite, and I don’t
know that it does much. Sometimes I send music videos. Mainly, if I get a
thought, I send it. I do this with the musicians and writers too. I will send
“thank yous” a lot, because I am grateful for good reading or listening
experiences. Those have a positive effect on my life. I know that often it
won’t be seen, and maybe it won’t matter, but I don’t want to get in the habit
of deciding who needs affirmation and who doesn’t. You’re too good-looking; you
don’t need me to tell you that. You have more than 5000 followers, so anything
I say will be pointles. Yes, sometimes they don’t need you to tell them, but
sometimes people seem so shocked by compliments that maybe it doesn’t happen
enough.
It’s not always
about that. When I “like” and “favorite” dog pictures, that’s not even
necessarily for the person who posted it; I’m just a sucker for dog pictures.
Well, pretty much any kind of animal picture actually, and nature shots, and
film quotes, and really, I am kind of easy in some ways. I don’t know how much
people care about seeing “likes” and “favorites”, but it does not require that
much effort to do it.
I do think there is
something important, though, about remembering that Tara and Matt love otters,
and that Ben is into Bob Mould, and Nick is addicted to Rooster Sauce. If you
see something that you know they will like, share it. I have a better than
average memory, which helps, but you can build that up if you will pay
attention to others, and look at them, and just care. And those are all real
people and likes, that involve interactions on Twitter and Facebook and even in
real life, but I am the same person across all media. Some people do adopt
personae, but I can’t.
So, I’m going to
tell a story that is kind of emotional for me, relating to the ancient medium
of snail mail. In Aloha 1st ward I was called to do the Relief
Society newsletter, and when I was going through the birthday list, I noticed
that some of the women were marked that you could only contact by mail or
phone. It occurred to me that I should send the letter to them, so for all of
the time I was editing the letter, I would also mail it to those five.
There was not much
to it. The first time I wrote notes explaining what I was doing. When it was
their birthday month I would send it in a birthday card, and I did some
Christmas cards, and then when I was going to be in Cooper Mountain ward, so
not doing it any longer, I wrote a note explaining. Maybe the next newsletter
person would carry on the tradition, but if not, there would not be this sudden
drop. I had given them my contact information in the first note, and I enclosed
it again this time.
I never heard from
any of these women, or knew anything about them, except one was kind of special
to me, because I went to school with her son, and I had mentioned that when I
first wrote. A few days after I sent her letter, my phone rang, and it was
another son of hers telling me that she had died, but that he wanted to let me
know because she thought of me as a friend she never saw, and she looked
forward to them.
I offered my
sympathies, and thanked him for letting me know, and then when the phone call
was done I just wept. There were so many emotions going on there, with this
deep feeling of loss and confusion, because should I have done more? Was that
really enough? But there was also relief, because if I hadn’t sent that last note
with the contact information, I wouldn’t have known. Or if I had given up after
a while, because obviously none of them cared, I would have been wrong.
So, as is typical, I don’t know what I’m doing here,
or where it’s going. Embrace it. I am turning into a big mush who gets
teary-eyed a lot. Embrace it. I do keep reaching out, which brings up all my
fears about being annoying and unwanted and irritating. Sometimes I might be,
but it seems more important that I stay loving. I embrace that too.
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