Finn

By:Max

It was a sunny day in Virginia beach. Finn and his family were down by the beach enjoying the warm sand and the cool ocean. Then, suddenly, Finn thought he saw a fin. He went berserk. “SHAAAAAAAAARK!” he screamed at the top of his lungs. He tried to move every one out of the water. The fin was coming closer, and closer, and closer. It was twenty feet from the shore when his 5 year old sister said, “That’s a shark floaty”. Finn felt his face get hot, “false alarm everybody” he said with a meek laugh. He heard giggling from a group of girls walking by. He back to his house. Alone. He figured that he may of overreacted a little, but it wasn’t his fault. When he was 5, he loved the ocean. He went out there everyday. Then one day, when he was out on the beach with his dad, his dad froze. He was looking at what Finn thought was him, but actually at the shark right behind him.

 

He panicked and stopped for a moment. Then he realized that he needed to swim as fast as he could. He was almost out of the water when, “CHOMP”, he looked back and saw red in the water. He lost his big toe. From then on, he had been extremely afraid of a shark coming onto the beach.

 

When Finn got home he had a snack and then fell asleep watching tv. He awoke to his parents coming home at midday for lunch. They told Finn to make himself some lunch and invited him to come back down to the beach with them. He agreed to because he was bored and there was nothing good to watch. So on the walk back to the beach, they talked about overcoming his fear of sharks coming onto the beach. “but fear is natural and it keeps you safe” he argued. “well too much fear is also bad, you need to have confidence in yourself” his mom told him. “when we get to the beach, I am going to go out into the open water and show you that it is completely safe.” his father said.

 

They got back to the beach and set up their shelter and all of them walked down to the water. Finn’s family kept walking into the water but Finn stopped. “I’m going to stay here, the water is kinda cold.” he said to excuse himself from getting into the water. “Okay, but you watch and see that it’s safe.” his dad told him. He watched as his dad swam away from the shore. “Ten feet, twenty feet, thir- hey wait is that a shark fin?” he yelled to his dad. His dad responded “no it’s just a porpoise, like I told you, this water is completely safe”. He was out about 100 feet around where Finn had seen the porpoises. “see look, I’m fine!” he yelled to Finn as a wave went by. “Where” Finn yelled back. There was no response. Then there was a crash as a legion of jets came by, shattering the windows of nearby buildings. Then they flew away to the aircraft carrier in the distance.

 

The shark was gobbling down everything in it’s path, “Gobble gobble gobble gobble gobble gobble gobble gobble gobble!” then there was a deafening roar as the jets came back and  started shooting at the shark. The shark just ate them and expelled them with extreme force at the jets. “The jets are getting hit!” Finn screamed. His mom heard “I wanna throw a fit” and replied “why, that won’t do anything”. Finn heard “Fly, cat front to my ring”. Then suddenly there was a hiss as a missile was released. Then there was a boom louder than anything Finn had ever heard. when the smoke cleared, they saw that it was raining shark guts. Then the shark guts turned gray, then they grew fins, and mouths.
The shark had multiplied then the jets started shooting them. “why are they doing that? they’ll just shoot them back.” But then Finn realized that there weren’t bullets going up, but the babies were vaporizing. The Jets flew away when the sharks were gone. “phew” Finn felt relieved. Finn’s family left the beach happy that nobody got hurt. They continued going to that beach and never had another problem about sharks. Finn didn’t quite get rid of his fear of sharks, but after the run-in with the mutant shark, he was much happier to go into the ocean because he knew that if he was in trouble, help would come.

Solving my Problems

I know I’m scared of 3 things and each probably has a memory it stemmed off of.The first is being stranded in an unfamiliar place. The second is being someone else. The third is being alone. I’m hoping to find where these fears came from in this essay.

The first fear is always at the back of my mind. What would I if all the people I knew disappeared or worse, never existed? What if one day I woke up in a house that I’ve never seen before and realized later on that I was the only person on Earth? If anything I’d go insane after a couple of days. I think this fear would probably come from me having siblings that I care about. All my life I’ve never been completely alone for more than a hour. It would feel like I was at the bottom of the ocean. I would be a hermit at the bottom of the ocean. That would be awful.

The second fear is something I ponder at times. I’m happy with my life and body. I would never replace the life I have if I ever had the choice. I wouldn’t even trade my life for a celebrities or billionaires life. I could never give up my family or friends. I could also never give up all the things I learned throughout my life. I could also never give up the bad things that happens in life. Those make me a better and stronger person.

The third fear is more passive because I only really feel it after awhile of being alone. I always thought that if I went to college, I would either be in a dorm with a roommate or living with my mom. This probably stems off of growing up with brothers and a dog. Most of the time I don’t mind it but after awhile of thinking it gets to me.

I’m glad I wrote this because after lots of heavy thinking I found out I care about my family and friends and that I’m happy with who I am. Fears can help you find yourself. Now I feel like a stronger person.

The Future shows Why

Vash Young once said “All my life I had feared to-morrow, until I decided to have faith and to live to-day in courage.” This means that Vash Young is saying that she was always afraid of what could happen in the future but you have to have faith and courage and live in the present because who knows what is going to happen in the future. Failing is my biggest fear because my future depend on what I do in the present.

Not having enough money can make a really big impact on whether you go to college or not. For example you need a lot of money to pay off to go to college except if you have a scholarship. This means if I don’t get a scholarship it will be extremely hard for me to get into college, since my parents don’t have enough money to actually pay for college. To go to college you will need a lot of money or have a lot of determination to be successful and be excellent at school you can get a scholarship.

Your future is very dependent on whether you have an education or not and if you fail at school your dreams can be shattered. For example if you are not good enough to go to college, then you wont have an education and you wont have the life that you wanted. This means that your future is dependent on the what you do in the present. If you fail in life your future will be like a mirror of what happened because of your failure.

Failing today will affect my tomorrow. Failing can affect your opportunity to go to college and as a result can affect your life. Your future is dependent on a lot of things. For example money has a very big impact on whether or not you go to college and your determination for success also has a very big impact on whether you go to college or not. If you go to college that has an impact on what your future can be. Fear is not an obstacle it’s just another reason to keep trying.

Bigger In New York

“Failed plans should not be interpreted as a failed vision. Visions don’t change, they are only refined. Plans rarely stay the same, and are scrapped or adjusted as needed. Be stubborn about the vision, but flexible with your plan.” John C. Maxwell says. I agree with his statement. I try to think through his perspective, but shame myself when I don’t try hard enough to work toward my goal because although I am only 13, I have grand plans for my life. I plan to a high school for the arts, attend FIT college in New York City, live in a beautiful neighborhood, get married, and have adorable children. Even though this plan may be refined over time, it will basically stay the same. As a grow, I expect to follow this plan. It’s almost like an easy-to-follow map to keep my life on track. My biggest fear is that this plan will be ruined by an unexpected event, and make my life like a roller coaster, with unforeseen twists and turns. I wouldn’t mind a few surprises, but I have goals in mind that I fear I may not be able to reach if my life takes another path.

 

When I was ten, I heard about the Fashion Institute of Technology. It seemed like a dream. Right out of a barbie movie, where I could have the chance to be the star. Since I loved drawing, painting, and shopping, I thought, “I could be a fashion designer!” To attend college in the heart of the city, learn about fashion, be exposed to different trends, noises, sounds and cultures made me dizzy with excitement. When we drove to the big apple around Thanksgiving time later that year, I visited the FIT museum to look around. I was astounded by all the history, artifacts, beautiful clothing, and exotic labels. There, I discovered Lauren Bacall. She was a beautiful old Hollywood actress and fashionista, born in the 1920’s. Her clothing was on display. Her Bacall and the Boys fall 1960’s fall fashion preview was playing on a projector.  I watched her movies, read some of her autobiography, Lauren Bacall, By Myself (personally signed, thanks to my grandmother) and analyzed her perfect eyebrows. Then I began to think, “Why can’t I be like her?”

 

That’s where my plan began. Every night after, I had dreams about college. Endless fun, cute outfits, and my name in lights. I craved to be in the city. The noise, smells, and the ora of it all made butterflies dance in my stomach. It seemed so perfect and achievable, but somewhere, buzzing in the back of my mind, I knew it was unrealistic. I directed my thoughts towards the positive aspects of a flexible future, but was disheartened to know that my life wouldn’t be as glamorous as Bacall’s movies.

 

Now, I have a slightly different way of seeing things. I will work towards smaller goals. One of my goals is to be more accepting of an unplanned fate. I will close my eyes and try my best to go where the wind blows me. Sometimes I confuse myself, because I am very flexible with the changing of small plans. If I wanted to wear a dress to school but it was in the washing machine, I would never throw a fit. Even if a family vacation was cancelled, I wouldn’t be too sad about it. But I will try to let go of my fear of messing up my overall plan, one small goal at a time. Like John Maxwell says, “Failed plans should not be interpreted as a failed vision.” I will try my hardest to do as these words say, and to embrace wherever life takes me.

 

The Lonely Monster

Dolan sat with his head in his hands. He knew that this would happen. Why would an Olly like him? He knew that he was ugly, stupid, and annoying. He still asked her anyway. He knew that he shouldn’t have. He just wanted to feel loved by someone. But he knew he was unlovable. Nobody could love him.

He pulled his head out of his hands. He had spent all of Ms.C’s class with his head in his hands. He knew that she would notice that Ms.C would notice something was wrong if he stayed like that. So instead he just…   Stared at the wheel of the computer cart.

He had liked Olly for half a year. He originally thought that maybe she liked him but once she had found out she just avoided him. It wasn’t the first time that year that he had felt rejected. A few weeks prior someone he thought to be his friend (Jen)  threw a huge party. All his friends were going it would be great! Except…   He wasn’t invited. He had only known Jen for a few months but he still thought they were friends. He only wanted people to be his friend. He felt like people didn’t want him. He felt alone.

The loneliness was the hardest part of the rejection. It felt he was floating through space millions of light years away from the nearest other person. He stood alone against the army of empty blackness. He could not win because the blackness was himself. He was lost within his mind. Lost within the thoughts of self hate.

Weeks turned into months and he still sat alone. He knew that other people hated him. It wasn’t their fault he thought. He knew it was him. He looked at himself in the mirror. Instead of a person he saw a monster. An ugly beast. He was no human. He was a monster.

He half a year later on a cold march day he and his class took a trip. He thought he love Olly. Why he did not know. All he knew was he wanted her love and friendship. He tried to stay close to her. But every time she would run far away. He was mocked by others for trying to find love. They found it where ever they wanted it but he could never find it. He was the unlovable monster.

Later that day something happened. Jen was on the other bus. They had be texting each other. On the bus. She had become his closest friend. He didn’t realize that she was his friend. He was still fighting the war against himself. He didn’t realize that he had friends.

The Jen texted him something he would never had thought to have seen. “will you go out with me” she asked. He stopped for a minute maybe someone did love him maybe some did…

Then she texted again. “It was a dare from Olly.”

His heart sank. He thought that Olly was nicer than that. He realized it then and there. If she was mean enough to do that to he could not love her. She would kill him. He did not want to die. But he wanted to love.

It did not take long for him to fall in love again. Jen was so nice. She talked to him. She was always kind. He realized that she was who he really loved now. Olly was not for him anymore. But of course she didn’t love him. He was truly unlovable.

He knew he wanted to live but he didn’t know how anymore. The pain of being unlovable was just too much. He couldn’t go on anymore. What could do he did not know. He could die?

 

NO.

He could and he will live. Because everything has beauty even a monster. This he would be told by many. All his friends who saw him as a beautiful person that did not have the ability to see beauty in himself. They helped him and he would live. Not as a monster but as a beautiful person.

“I Won!”

My opponents going

around and around the board,

winning

fear of losing

like they were going round and round

one million times, never stopping

then finally, my turn

should I cheat? Do you want to win?

I want to win, so I cheat

“stop cheating, stop cheating!”

My opponents going

around and around the board,

winning

I glanced at the board to scream “I won”

always wanting to win

but that never happened

When I heard people say “I won”

it felt like a million knives stabbing me

I hated the bitter taste

whenever I lost I felt the wet tears

dripping

down

my

face

My opponents going

around and around the board

winning

still wondering

will I EVER win?

will I EVER win?

Memoir

***For the protection and confidentiality of the truly wonderful and brave, I have changed all the names of the other clients in this story.***

It all began on December 9th, 2014.  I was 12 years old, and very disoriented.  The inside of my head was spinning, and the room was dark, but the disco lights from the Christmas tree added a rainbow glow to the dull room.  Everything was blurred together, and I could hardly breathe.

 

“Please,” I wailed one more time, just because I didn’t know what else to do.

 

“Don’t send me away.  Please.”

 

The volume of my voice rose to a shriek, then back down to a low whimper, as it had been doing for the past twenty minutes, after I processed the fact that my parents really were going to send me away, to a treatment center, when I clearly didn’t want recovery.  At that point in my life, I would rather die than gain a single pound.   That was it.  I knew I had to act fast.  I jumped up from the soft brown couch, and flung my arm out.  My fingers caught on a string of lights, and the tree tumbled to the ground.  Treasured glass ornaments shattered upon contact with the wooden floor, and through the haze, I saw every detail, as if I were viewing it in the form of a slow motion movie. I knew I had to get out of there, so I fled through the front door, slamming it behind me.  As I ran up my dim block, lit only by the candle-like glow from the houses, block, I wondered where I should go.  I deeply considered running away from home, like the kids from “The Boxcar Children”.

 

One of my closest friends, Sophia, lived nearby; only about two blocks away- I walked to school with her every day.  I argued with myself over whether or not  I should flee to her house; and the only thing that stopped me was the fact that I knew they would take me back where I couldn’t return.  So, after contemplating what the best move was, I decided to run around the block a few times, after all,  if my parents had their way, it would probably be my last chance for a while to burn a few calories.

 

When I finally gave up and returned to my house, I found that my mom had already begun to pack my suitcase.  My dad was out looking for me, but I was too exhausted to care.  I balled up under my covers and cried myself to sleep, letting all the anger seep out with my tears.  Sometime around one AM, I awoke with a subconscious need to exercise, as I had every night for the past few weeks.

 

Just a few days earlier, I had told my mom, through gritted teeth, that I would rather be skinny than have all the happiness in the world.  Whenever I walked through the school hallway to my classes, I concentrated on comparing the size of my legs to those of people at their lockers.   I may not have wanted it, but I sure did need help.  I gave up all my anger towards my parents, and it dawned on me that I would be away from them for a long time, with strangers, in a place where I would have to eat.  I stumbled into their dark room, and my mom invited me to sleep between her and my dad, as I had done in my younger childhood.  I curled up beside her and sobbed into her shoulder.

 

After my sisters left for school, my mom took me to Barnes and Noble, where I picked out stationary, because I couldn’t have my phone, and I had limited phone time on the phone at the facility.  Then, it was straight to Center For Discovery, or CFD.  When I got there, it took me a while to realize that it was a house, and not that we were in the wrong place.  They really weren’t kidding when they called it a ‘residential treatment center.’ In the atrium, there was a huge glass chandelier, and there were teens in the background, just as emaciated as me.  When my parents filled out forms in the formal, I was taken up to one of the therapist’s offices, to be questioned.  I was asked everything from my treatment preferences (not to be there) to how many times I eat a day (none, if it were up to me).  The worst part of that process was that they made me eat a peanut butter and jelly sandwich and carrots with hummus.  For the first time in a long time, I didn’t try to get rid of it.  After many tears were shed and my parents departed, the staff brought me downstairs to the art room, where the other people (they called us clients) were tye dying shirts, and I thought to myself, ‘Well this isn’t so bad!’

 

Just about an hour later, I was told that group was starting.  I had no idea what they were talking about, but I followed the others to the living room/ group room, where there was a movie set up.  One of the other clients, Amanda, (she was my roommate, as I would soon find out) told me; “It’s time for documentary group.”  We watched a film about how women are influenced to look a certain way.

“People shouldn’t care enough about other people’s bodies to tell them how they should look.”  I thought out loud in the discussion after the documentary,  trying to be inspirational. Which was hard, considering, that, at this particular moment in my life, I didn’t really believe the words coming out of my mouth.

“I agree,” Amanda began, “People shouldn’t care… It’s not about them, so why do they feel the need to make it their business?”  Then the conversation took an abrupt turn to a get-to-know-you type of talk between me and everyone else.  There was a bulimic boy, Chris, who told hysterical stories about people he hardly even knew, and drew amazing pictures.  He had been there for just under a month.  Zoë, who had been at CFD for roughly three weeks, had been struggling with anorexia for three years, and she was basically me, just older; Amanda, who was ‘celebrating’ her first week-versary, was anorexic as well, and she was sort of the popular girl of the group; there was Alexis, who had been there since just after Chris; the shy, quiet type, who was actually an exciting, funny girl when she opened up to you, and there was Margaret, who would eventually have a turn-around and become one of my best friends ever, but at the time, she never said a word and cried in the corner 24/7.  She had been at CFD for about two weeks.  Then there was me, the 12-year-old anorexic girl who they all looked at funny because I was too young, too weird, too innocent.

 

On my first night, as I was walking to the nurse’s area, which was only accessible through the art room, Alexis gestured for me to come over by the art room sink.  When I got there, she asked me; “Do you think I’m fat?  Be honest.”  I was taken aback.  Wasn’t there some sort of rule where the ‘F’ word was ‘fat’ here?  I had no idea how to reply, so I said what I thought would be the most supportive to this poor girl, who didn’t know the unspoken rule of eating disorders- ‘You don’t talk to people about it, you simply believe that the truest thing ever is the fact that you are fat.’ I stuttered over the first few syllables as I began to speak.  “F-fat?!?!” I exclaimed, “You? You’re not fat, you’re healthy.”  I don’t know why I thought that this would make her feel better, considering, in an eating disorder mind, ‘fat’ and ‘healthy’ are synonyms.  I suppose I had thought that because she had been there for about a month, she would be past that way of thinking.  I was wrong.

 

“Oh… I uh, I have to go.”

She fled the room, clearly hurt.  Had I really screwed up yet again?  It seems like that’s all I do in my life- mess up.  Hurt people.  Offend my peers.  Disobey those superior to me.  Oh well, to me, at least then, it was all worth it.  I didn’t need anyone to like me, not if I could be skinny.

 

Days passed without leaving the house, and I was forced to eat more and more, without exercising at all.  I felt trapped, but eventually, I was allowed to go on walks.  I still had two daily visits with the nurse, and blood drawn every few days.  However I acted to the other clients and to the staff, I was not remotely motivated to put this behind me.

 

Christmas time rolled around, and I was forced to eat unhealthy holiday food.  Amanda discharged (left- she was doing well enough to remain stable without the aid of 24/7 support) and Chris was sent to another treatment center, this one for drug abuse.  There were two new girls, Lia, who adored puzzles, but slept a lot; and Becca, who was quite a fun person with lots of drama going on in her life, which overwhelmed her, so that she ignored her life and focused only on her eating disorder.

I may have thought I was ready to go home, but the truth was, I was still so focused on my weight that 90% of the topics written in my journal were just that- “I’m fat enough already!”  “Haven’t I met my goal weight?”  “I really don’t want- or need- to gain any more weight!”  “Why can’t I know how much I weigh?  I know I’m fat!  What’s the harm?”  In order to recover, I needed to let all this go, but I simply refused.  For over 50 days, I refused.  I told myself that I could recover without giving up my passionate desire to be, basically, an emaciated body from the holocaust.  I needed to let myself fall into recovery, instead of trying to leave without doing so.  If I wanted to get out, I had to smile, let my worries go, and burst my eating disorder as you would a balloon.

 

“Day 28: 1/6/15

‘No more writing down what you eat’ is what Maureen, the resident dietician, said, so I guess I won’t be doing that anymore.  At the restaurant outing, I wanted to get a pesto-veggie sandwich, but Maureen said I had to get a veggie burger, because there wasn’t enough protein in the sandwich, but when we got back to the house, she made me have a cheese stick for extra protein anyways!  It snowed, so I couldn’t go on walk again- it’s not fair!  I need the exercise!  Lia fell asleep on the couch and we started dinner without her, and didn’t realize she was missing from the table for like 5 minutes!  My family meal is on Friday for am snack, but and I hope this means I can discharge soon, but I really don’t want to weigh more than I do right now!  I’m fat enough already!”

 

“Day 29: 1/7/15

I should be discharged already, but we haven’t even talked about it.  Ugh! It’s not fair! I’m staying here getting fat for no reason!!! WTF?!?!?!  I just want to be skinny.  Is that too much to ask?  Alexis went for a run today, and now she isn’t allowed to prep any meals or snacks, and I feel like that’s my fault, because I went running on Sunday which gave her the idea, but I didn’t get caught.  Margaret and I did a new yoga video today, because we couldn’t go on walk. (it was too cold)  It was really cool- there are really fun bicycle crunches and stuff.”

 

“Day 30: 1/8/15

My family meal is tomorrow at am snack, and I’m really excited, but I’m terrified of gaining weight!  Laura, one of the staff members, broke the glass part of the blender at breakfast, so now we can’t have smoothies, which sucks, because I planned for having three or four in just the two upcoming days!  I went outside this morning on the porch in shorts, and it was supposedly 5-7°F, but it didn’t feel remotely cold!  But, unfortunately, we can’t go on walk for the fourth day in a row.  (probably- walk happens after lunch, and I am currently writing, before walk time- it’s am snack prep), but maybe we could do more yoga videos instead.  I’m really nervous/anxious/anticipatory for contract group!  I hope I moved up phases/ can prep more meals/snacks/ moved up exercise levels, but I’m sure to be disappointed, most likely about everything.  We’ll see!”

 

As I got further and further into recovery, things got better and better.  By the time my birthday rolled around, I had been there for two months and a day, but recovery was finally getting to me.  The other two clients, Lia and Genevieve, made a scavenger hunt for me, and with every clue there was a small gift.  Throughout the day, staff, therapists, and clients surrounded me with love and, of course, presents.  I had never felt so happy or loved in my life.  As the day came to a close, my family came to the house for dinner (I couldn’t go home for a pass because that didn’t give us enough time to celebrate- it was a school night for my sisters), and we had my favorite meal- pasta salad, and for dessert, chocolate-strawberry cake with whipped cream frosting.  I enjoyed every bite I ate that night, something I hadn’t done in so long, I had to focus all of my attention onto it.  From my parents, I got a bean bag and a new quilt for my bed (my mom made it!), and from my sisters, I got books.  I fell asleep feeling happy and giddy.  I was just starting to jump into recovery, and it was as satisfying as jumping into a pit of balloons is for a little kid.

 

The following day, I got to know the new client, Linnea, a little bit better.  She arrived on my birthday, but I was so caught up in all the festivities, I didn’t get to welcome her.  It turns out, she went to the same middle school as me, and she also had Mr. Alderton for 7th grade gym.  We bonded over that, and she told me “I think he knew about my eating disorder,” and when I replied with , “Why do you say that?”, she explained, “Well, he always talked about how we had to refuel our bodies after physical activity, as he looked directly at me.  Also, in the nutrition unit, he made sure that we knew that under eating is just as bad as overeating.”  That comment took me back to the nutrition unit at the beginning of the year, in which Mr. Alderton hadn’t said a word about undereating, and this brought me to the conclusion that he really did know about Lauren’s eating disorder, but maybe not mine, because he hadn’t taught us about the harmful effects of not getting proper nutrition, although he had subtly hinted at it with her class, and his comments had seemed directed at her, at least from the way she told the story.  She seemed quiet at first, but after Genevive, Lia, and I showed her how to play steam rollers, (you roll around on the floor and whoever can roll over the other person wins that round) she offered the idea of having a bean bag fight.  We did- and ten minutes later, we all stood in the center of the room, hair plastered to our faces, trying to catch our breath, but failing to- we were all laughing too hard.

 

Another fond memory was with my therapist, Georgia, about the time of my dad’s birthday (late January).  We had blown up nearly a hundred balloons and stuffed them in Margret’s closet (she was discharging the following day), and when she opened the door, there was a downpour of balloons.  We just couldn’t let that be all the fun we had with the balloons we had spent so much breath and hard work filling, so we hid them behind a chair (it was in the corner of the room, but at an angle, so that a triangle was created from the back of the chair and the wall) in Georgia’s office, and the next morning, at the close of my therapy session, I ran, full speed at the armchair, hurdled over the back, and landed with a satisfyingly loud series of pops.  She was taken aback by the event, but, being the wonderful person she is, hopped in and joined me.  For weeks, we all enjoyed the fulfilling closure of a nice jump in the balloon pit whenever we left Georgia’s office.

 

Though, towards the end of my time out of school, most of the memories are fond, there were still some moments that weren’t 100% joyful.  I was sitting on the familiar grey sofa in the basement office (Georgia’s office), fiddling with one of the blue-green decorative pillows.  We were in session, discussing plans for after discharge, while, in my head, I was contemplating whether or not I should ask when, exactly, I would discharge.  Finally, I gathered up the courage to mumble the question which had been on my mind for months, but only now did I really feel that I was ready.  “Georgia,” I murmured under my breath, “When do you think I will discharge?  Do you think it will be before my birthday?” I hardly expected her to reply with a yes, and my predictions were correct.  “I’m sorry Erms,” she replied, sounding genuine (Erms was my nickname given from her and Lia) “But I don’t think so, just because we need to see how things work out.”

“Yeah,” I replied, disappointed that the best-case-scenario wasn’t what had happened.  I don’t really remember what happened after that, but I do remember that I was about to leave without jumping into the balloon pit, but Georgia stopped me and asked “Aren’t you going to jump in?”  I didn’t really have it in me to be lighthearted or frivolous enough to enjoy that, but I hopped in anyways, just to make her happy.  As I took the flying leap into the corner, I smiled to myself.  Not just because I wasn’t as upset anymore, but because I was enjoying myself.  I didn’t really care how I looked in that moment, I just cared that I was having fun.   I lept into the balloon pit as I had lept into recovery- at first, I tried to avoid it, but then, with some coaxing, I wholeheartedly flung myself into it.

The Depths Of Fear: A True Story

 

I walked into the hotel pool area, my heart pounding as loud as a drum in a marching band, with the cool, muggy air enveloping my body and stifling my ability to breathe clearly. I was walking into my first swim lesson that I had ever remembered, let alone my first time spending a long amount of time in a pool. When I walked onto the pool deck, what I saw immediately made my heart sink. A young, African-American guy with a thick, black beard was soothingly convincing a young toddler to float and turn over, a toddler! I felt like I was the dumbest kid on earth, (who was a rising sixth grader!) one who didn’t even know how to swim!

All the past summers as far back as I can remember at every summer camp, I would never even dip a toe into a pool, I would never go into the pool, I was the only kid who never went into the pool, I thought I was the weirdest person ever. I was always scared of the water because  I thought that I would drown or worse. The voice of the other male instructor at the other end of the pool told me to enter the pool which snapped me out of my flashbacks, so I timidly walked over and clutched the metal railing while inching my way down the baby steps into the pool. The surprisingly warm water greeted my body as I descended into the pool.

The lesson went by fast, with my instructor convincing me to go on my back and float, with him supporting my head. After that lesson I felt a tiny bit proud but with a whopping side of fear about what would happen next. Those short half-hour lessons went by, week by week, month by month, and over the period of a year with two different instructors, learning many more strokes from freestyle to breaststroke. But soon I was finally going to face my second biggest fear: the big pool.

From when I had started to that current time, I had always felt comfortable in the small, warm hotel pool but was quickly growing out of it. At my last time in the small hotel pool, my instructor told me that I was going to be going into the bigger pool. When those words came out of his mouth, I felt a jolt of fear in my heart, one that made me fear the future once again. Once I had walked into our cavernous neighborhood indoor pool the next week, all I could think about was how deep the water was going to be that I was swimming in and drowning in the pool. To my shock, when I went out into the cold, warehouse-like pool, I saw that I was swimming in some of the same depths as in the hotel pool. My biggest challenge yet, diving into very deep water was going to happen just a mere few weeks after.

On that day, after swimming for a half hour and told to go to the diving area, my heart started pounding as loudly as the first time I first went into the hotel pool. When I got over to the diving area, everyone else started diving and I just watched while my instructor slowly persuaded me to dive in a little bit. When I dived in, it felt like was in an aquarium, with it seeming like the pool had a endless bottom pit, with no where to go. I also felt like everything was distorted. like when you use the wrong glasses and everything gets distorted and out of proportion. After that, when I pulled myself from the strong hand of the deep pool, I had a newfound sense of pride, that I had just overcome something that had plagued me my whole childhood.

To this day I am still taking swim lessons on how to dive better, do flip turns and swim faster and stronger. But, I have never really wanted to share my story of courage because I didn’t know how people would react, if they would be supportive and champion me or be negative and make me feel that I wished I hadn’t shared my story. But now I feel more liberated than ever.

The Meaningful Zip-line

I am in a foreign land

There is a fresh spring of water

It is surrounded by big boulders under water

They are like cars

There is a kid operating a zip-line

It is an old zip-line that towers 50 feet over the water like a giant

The zip-line is a strong wire with bike handle bars

It stretches 200 feet across water

If you let go too early then you will die

I step up to try it but I stop

What if I slip

What if I let go too early

What if I let go too late

What if the wire snaps

What if

What if

What if

What if it is fun

I build up my courage inside

I reach up on my tippy toes and grab the bar

I push off and soar over water like an eagle

I wait for the right time and take a deep breath

Then I let go and I feel weightless

I fall 50 feet in slow motion then plunge into water

I swim 20 feet back up to the light

Once I reach the surface I am as happy as a mug

What if I didn’t try that

Harmless Or Dangerous

My car broke down in the middle of the woods

I was not prepared so I had no goods

The sun is burning on this hot, summer day

I see a stranger across the way

He peers at me with his long, stinging glare

And I think, does he hate me or does he care

I cannot believe what I see in his hand

I think, am I a coward or am I a man

I run away as fast as the wind

But hearing his voice

Made me lose it

I couldn’t rhyme

Or think of a way out

He catches up I start losing my breath

Only to find he has a helpful wrench in his hand

He finds the problem within my car

And fixes it with ease

Now I know you can still be scared

But if they really care

You shouldn’t be scared

You should face your fears and let them hear