As a lonely youngest-child with imaginary friends and an
invisible flavored air dispenser in my backyard, it’s no secret that I was a
bit of a weirdo. That sentence could easily read: As a barely functioning
semi-adult who counts syllables and makes her freshman Literature students
chant along with her while reading Lord
of the Flies, it’s no secret that I am
a bit of a weirdo.
The point being, I’ve always been strange. Most of the time,
I embrace the weird. Sometimes I even flaunt it. But this wasn’t always the
case. Once, when I was around seven, I spent a good hour sobbing in my room over
an upcoming field trip because My mom was a chaperone, which meant I had to
choose my group members. But what if they don’t want to be in my group? What if
I accidentally separate best friends? What if I put someone in my group and she
ends up being mean? What if I say something stupid and nobody likes me, and
then I’ll be miserable for the entire zoo trip? What if they think I’m a baby
for having my mom come along?
“I just want to be popular,” I repeated through tears, using
a word I barely understood, casting it as the Most Important Thing.
As it turned out, my teacher picked our groups and you got
what you got. To this day, I have no idea who was in my group or if anything
remotely dramatic went down at the zoo. But that question, that desire to be
popular, was something that followed me through most of school. And since I
didn’t have a pocket Glinda to give me a makeover, I feared I was doomed to be
an outcast forever. Smart, but not like the kids in my Calculus class. Good at
flute, but since when was that cool? Creative, but too terrified to show the
weird to anyone.
That’s not to say I had no friends. I did—most of whom I
still keep up with today. We found each other the way a group of strays comes
together and sets up a little society in an alley. We became a family. And I
would never devalue what we had or what we still have today.
But for so long, as I watched the golden gods who ruled my
small town, I just wanted to be a part of them. I couldn’t even say why. As I
got older, I realized most of that adoration was hollow. I learned everyone
just wants to be loved for their weird, scared, raw selves, even the Populars.
In the past few months, I’ve spent more time getting
involved in the online writing community. Ha, I say that like there aren’t a
thousand, like this isn’t just a teeny branch of the great oak that is the
literary world. But I still feel like I’m on the ground looking up, wishing
with everything I have in me that I could climb that tree.
This time, it isn’t about being adored. It isn’t about
wanting fans or followers. It’s about being mesmerized by the things my favorite
writers create, and wishing I could make even a fraction of the beautiful art
they do. It’s about a world that is hurting, a human population that burns for
something real, something deep, something new. It’s knowing that every single
one of those artists was (or is) just as terrified of the world seeing their
raw, authentic, weird selves, and the love and admiration I have for them for
having the courage to show us.
It’s knowing these are my people, and fearing I’ll never
make it up there with them. I’m something of a control freak (a statement I’m
sure surprises no one), and I keep thinking if I can change this thing in my manuscript or cut this many words or present myself in this way on social media that I’ll be
found. That I’ll get to sit on a branch with my heroes, the artists who are
moving and shaking this fragile world.
But there’s no magic formula. There’s no elevator, and there
might not be a ladder. If I want to be in that tree, I have to climb. I just
want a chance for my words to settle in the ears and hearts of people. So here
it is, my weird, scared, raw self. I hope there’s a place somewhere in that
great oak for my stories.
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