I went through my file, Wednesday.
Now, you might be asking, “What file?” to which I respond,
“The file of my life.”
It is exactly what it sounds like. It is a file, the kind
you find in a file cabinet, filled to bursting with records and rewards, documenting
my life.
I was looking for my immunization records because the
Evergreen State College requires them. While digging through my file in my
search, I found many other things that tell an interesting story about me—more
interesting than I’ve ever given myself credit for.
There’s something about seeing an accomplishment written on
paper—by someone else—that finally made it click
in my mind that maybe, just maybe, I
actually had accomplished something in my life. Maybe—just fucking maybe—I wasn’t a complete piece of shit, after all.
Ever since my diagnosis from the VA of “major depressive
disorder,” it’s been a far more real and difficult battle than I’ve previously
encountered. Fresh out of the military—thrown into adult life as a civilian
with absolutely nothing—in addition to a brand-new baby and post-partum
depression, along with the feeling that waiting simply wasn’t an option…
I’ve felt like a fuck-up since the day I set foot into the
operational Air Force, but that feeling was the feeling of success compared to
the feeling of utter failure I’ve felt since the day I separated.
But, then, I went through my file and found certificates of
achievement, one after another.
Bethel High School
Cultural Fair, Most Informative Booth: GSA Booth, Aleashia DeLaVergne.
Bethel High School
Cultural Fair, Best Visual Display: GSA Booth, Aleashia DeLaVergne
Bethel High School
Cultural Fair…
I think I have 5 different awards for “best booth” in one
form or another from my sophomore year in the GSA club. My booth was about
equal rights for the LGBT community and it displayed the violence perpetrated
against gay people, particularly gay men and even more particularly, Matthew
Shepard, whose story was the most detailed one I could find.
Lenderman’s Academy of
Martial Arts… awards Aleashia DeLaVergne… yellow belt… orange belt… purple
belt… green belt… first blue belt… second blue belt… first red belt.
Each belt is an accomplishment. I completed the requirements
as a white belt to earn my yellow belt. I completed the requirements as a
yellow belt to earn my orange belt. I completed the requirements as an orange
belt to earn my purple belt, and so on until I earned my first red belt.
All this time, I’ve focused on how I hurt myself because of
how badly Sifu had pressured me. I’ve focused on how hurting myself caused me
to quit martial arts before I could earn my second red belt. Before I could
earn my first or second brown belt; before I could earn my black belt. I wanted my black belt… I still do.
Then, finally…
I saw my reviews from National History Day, written by the
judges of my performance, which I had the opportunity to perform twice at the regional competition. They
all say such positive things—“Well done.”
“Voicing the American People was a brave choice.” “Smooth character
transitions.” “Well done.” “Good voice.” “I
learned a lot from your performance.”
All this time, I’ve focused so hard on how I didn’t make it to the state competition.
I was so focused on getting all the way to State—hopefully even Nationals—that
when I didn’t make it past Regionals, I broke down. I remember—and now, when I
remember the event, I am filled with humiliation, but at the time, I couldn’t
have been bothered with embarrassment—exactly how I practically
hyperventilated, I was crying so hard and so insistently. I remember distinctly
how concerned Joey was—my classmate; my friend.
All this time, I’ve had six—at least SIX—positive reviews from the judges at that competition.
And I burned my fucking script because I threw a fit and destroyed everything
I’d worked so hard to achieve. I burned the papers, deleted the files.
If I still had my script, I would take on those roles once
more, to perform as my final project in my Acting & Movement class. As it
is, I’ll have to settle with singing the German National Anthem, and simply
remember the competition more fondly by looking at my reviews every so often.
I also came across an essay I wrote for my AP Junior English
class, my grade for which was above A+. I also found my report card for 9th
grade geometry—a solid, resounding “A” grade. Both of these things were great
accomplishments for me; I felt so proud of them that I wanted to save them in
my file.
In the very back of my file, there were two folders. One had
my grandmother’s name on it, but the one with my name on it included my medical
files from the years 1999 and 2000. In this stapled stack of papers were my
immunization records, somewhere near the back.
My medical records taught me some things about my child
self, at ages 7 and 8—the ages during which I lived with my mother. I have
always remembered those years as the worst of my life and my medical records
did little to disperse such reverie.
It was written in my medical records that we had 5 paper
routes beginning at 03:00—that’s 3:00am for those of you who don’t deal with a
24-hour clock. It was written that my teachers reported my having “lots of
attitude” and being “bored in class.” It even said, “Smartest kid in class.”
It said I was doing 4th grade work in the 3rd grade
because I was bored with the 3rd-grade work.
I remember this. I don’t remember being the smartest kid in
class, though; because I remember the test I took to skip the 3rd
grade. That’s right—I took a test to skip
the 3rd grade and I could have passed it. But, I didn’t. It’s
probably better that I didn’t; I was always the youngest in my class, anyway.
But now I see, my entire life, I’ve only focused on how I failed the test—not on how few other
children were testing to skip grades. Not on how none of the kids I wanted to
be friends with had the opportunity to skip a grade. Not on the fact that the
very fact that I was taking the test meant that I was extremely intelligent. No. Instead, I focused on how I failed. Suddenly, failing that test
meant that I wasn’t smart at all. In fact, it meant I was stupid. I didn’t know
anything.
I feel as if my life has been completely turned around.
Looking through my file, reading my certificates and accomplishments, has done
a great deal to go to my ego and boost me. Looking through my file has made me
think to myself, “I am smart and capable.” I don’t remember the last time I
thought something like that.
Looking through my file made me realize just how
self-deprecating I’ve been in my life, and for how long. I’m so glad I have this
organized collection of significance in my life—my SAT and ASVAB scores; my
AFJROTC awards; my birth certificates. Those things are my life. My file
doesn’t have an ounce of failure in it, but it does demonstrate some ways my
mother failed me. It also demonstrates that I have been sick for a very long
time and nobody had been able to notice it because of how bright and highly
functioning I was. Not even I was able to see how bad it was because I believed
that it was all in my head; I believed that I was just “feeling sorry for
myself” for no reason, every time I cried over the petty losses and the small
setbacks—tears I shed because I believed that they were colossal failures in my
life.
Molehills were mountains. Mountains were insurmountable. I
didn’t encounter a mountain until I separated from the military.
The thing is, when you come to a mountain, you have three
choices. You can try to walk around it and probably spend your entire life
figuring out directions; you can climb over it; or you can stay on your side of
the mountain, unmoving and helpless.
My depression wants to hold me back from climbing the
mountain, because the gods know that I do not have the patience to walk around.
After all, what I want is on the other side, and I will do everything in my
power to take the most direct path to get it. The most direct path from point A
to point B is a straight line; a straight line goes right over that fucking
mountain. I’m a monkey; I’ll manage. My depression tells me I’m a failure, that
I can’t climb the mountain because I didn’t skip 3rd grade, I didn’t
get my black belt, I didn’t make it to State, I didn’t complete my enlistment
in the Air Force. My depression told me that I couldn’t take care of my
daughter because I don’t have patience, I raise my voice when I’m upset, I’m
not capable of handling my emotions. My depression tells me I’m stupid and helpless.
Helplessness has never set well with me. It’s time to climb
the mountain.
I have my own struggle with depression, but I think for you at least it is a sign of greatness, you feel a little deeper than most, you love from a greater depth, you love a little harder and so where most humans want to conform and be the status quo, not make waves or rock the boat, you try harder, people who love deeply and passionately also have a greater fall, because the strive for a greater height.
ReplyDelete