Posts Tagged ‘immaturity’

The Bitch Is Back

So yesterday I had an epiphany. Not the kind that will solve the healthcare crisis or even make the Jersey shore cast return to their natural selves (no steroids! no tanners! no saline!), but hey, it made me feel better.

For the longest time, I’ve been really slacking in the blog arena. Not keeping up with my favorite bloggers, not posting as much, not posting as well. I blamed it on writing for Demand Media and on not having as much time in general.

And that, dear readers, is bullshit.

I have been depressed and I haven’t wanted to post about it. I’ve had a lot of excellent reasons to be depressed, but I haven’t wanted to post about them either. In fact, I’ve been afraid to post about a lot of things, for fear of insulting or over-sharing with the people I know in real life who read this blog.

And it occurred to me yesterday that the more I worry about not living up to other people’s expectations of me, the less I feel like myself. You’re probably thinking, “Duh, it’s so sad that you didn’t figure that out when you were 20.”

I did. But motherhood – and all the inherent expectations of “good” motherhood – made me forget. Then we moved back here to Stuck-Up (where not everyone is Stuck-Up, but you all know what I’m talking about) and I completely lost it.

I started imagining other people’s expectations of me. It was like in my head I went back to the last time I lived here. In high school.  Do you have any idea what it’s like to have a high school mentality and adult problems?

My head has been like a really bizarre episode of 16 and Pregnant.

And I am SO over it. If one of my posts offends you, I’m sorry. Feel free to write a nasty comment or ignore me at the grocery store. If you don’t like me and you take it out on my kids (my greatest fear), I will kick your ass.

And if I’ve been ignoring your blog, I’m sorry. I’m back now.

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When I Grow Up. . .

When I grow up, I’m going to stop caring what people think about me.

It would be one thing, I suppose, if I worked really hard to fit in and make people like me. But I did that in high school and I’m kind of over it now. It would be one thing if I didn’t already have friends. It would be one thing if I was running for office.

But I’m not running for office. Hell, I couldn’t even handle being a class mom. And let’s face it, if I was trying to make people like me my blog probably wouldn’t be a constant bitchfest about stupid people and/or why my children are more awesome and more challenging than average. I would probably repost those status updates on Facebook that describe how awesome my mother and my husband are.

If I wanted more people around here to like me, I would probably spend a lot more money on clothes. I would also probably remember more people’s names. Oh, and I might stop talking so much (look, I don’t get out a lot. I get a little excited.) Maybe I’d even be more patient when the woman ahead of me at the grocery store has to run back through the aisles FOUR times to get stuff she forgot and then pays with PENNIES (although you’d think refraining from punching her would make me likable enough).

But I’m not in high school anymore (Even though I have theory that life is really just a big version of high school, the lack of blue eyeshadow and the presence of wrinkles should be enough to remind me that actual high school, is, in fact, over). I would rather spend money on my family. And clearly I’m not going to grow out of this bitch phase. The patience for others is not going to magically appear.

So why does it bother me so much when people don’t like me? Especially if, as is generally the case, I don’t like them either. Is it just because my WASP background makes me believe that dislike should be buried so far under politeness that you can never even be sure if it’s really there? Like these people are disrespecting me by being so obvious about it?

Or is it because at heart I”m still a 13 year old girl (and the fact that I actually get more zits now is just a little young-at-heart bonus)?

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Do They Still Sell Guess Jeans?

I never thought I would say this. But. . .I kinda miss high school.

It’s not that I peaked in high school or anything. I was filled with angst and insecurity, unable to attract and/or keep a decent boyfriend, secretly intimidated by all of my friends because they were all prettier and/or smarter and/or kinder than I could ever be. I was convinced that my size four body was fat. I was just as much of a hormonal loser as the next person. Though I did have really cute clothes. For the eighties, anyway.

What I really miss:  I miss actually resting when sick. I miss not having to clean the bathroom or pay the bills. I miss having all of my friends live within five miles of me. I miss being a size four (especially because I would totally appreciate it now). I miss sleeping late on the weekends. I miss beer. I miss going out for lunch every day (do they even allow open campus anymore?). I miss getting a real tan from the SUN. I miss having a close friend with a pool. I miss being able to actually finish a to-do list.

Is there anything you miss about high school?

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