Since most of you who read this blog have no possibilty of picking up the latest issue of VeckoRevyn, where I tell the not very pleasant story of my situation in school during my early teens, I thought I'd try translating it for you. Not the finished article - that feels weird, like writing about myself in the third person - but my answers to the interview questions.
This post will be terribly lengthy, and I'm absolutely not asking anyone to read through the whole thing. But even if there's only one person out there who is going through similar issues, and who might find it a relief to read about someone else's experiences with bullying, I don't mind one bit if all the rest of you scroll past it.
What was school like for you?
Right from the moment I started first grade, I had the feeling there must be something wrong with me. Making friends seemed so easy for everyone else, so effortless, but for me... The few times I was included in the schoolyard fun and games, it was like they were all doing me a favor. I would usually stand ten feet away, observing, or hide out reading in the library.
The older I got, the more I felt like an outsider. Though I wouldn't say that I was bullied until I was 13 and started the 7th grade - before that, I was simply not a person who people liked, but at least I wasn't afraid of going to school.
My junior high school years - age 13 to 15 - were nothing but a nightmare. We were a couple of girls who used to hang out, drawn together by the fact that we were at the very bottom of the social hierarchy. At the time, I was certain I was the one out of our little group who was most exposed to the constant harassments, but today I realize that it's possible - likely, even - that we all felt that way.
I honestly don't understand how I made it through those years. Today, I wouldn't be able to stand a week in that environment. Partly because now I would refuse being treated that way - I would say "screw you guys, I'm going home!", walk out the door and never come back. But back then, I didn't think I had an option. What if everything would get even worse if I transferred to a different school? I might have been living in hell, but better the devil you know. (At least that's what I told myself.) I knew what corridors to avoid, I knew when to hide, I knew when to run. I knew who would spit on me and who would just look away.
Plus: as long as I stayed in the same school, I could secretly hold on to the trace of hope that maybe they were the problem, not me. If I did transfer and the new school turned out to be just as bad - or worse - that would be the final evidence that I really did deserve to be treated the way I was, since I simply couldn't stop being so damn ugly, weird, nerdy, disgusting; such an f-ing loser. That all the things I was told every day actually were true. Then, all hope would be lost. And they might say that hope is the last thing to die, but when it does, that's when you're in serious trouble. So I stayed and endured. I woke up every morning, I took the bus to school and I prayed that I would make it back home.
How did you feel during those years?
To be honest, I barely ever dare to think about it. I was constantly scared for my life - literally. I lost track early on of how many times I was told I would soon end up dead, but I do know it was enough times for me to believe it. And I really, really didn't want to die, not even when things were at its worst. I had some sort of idea of a far-off future when everything would be better, when all I'd been through would be nothing but a distant memory, and I desperately wanted to keep on living, to find out if my fantasy would one day come true.
Sure, there were tons of superficial incentives that made me an easy target: every piece of clothing I wore was either cheap mailorder items or hand-me-downs from older relatives, I cut my own hair in horrific styles and had no clue whatsoever how to blend in with the other girls. On top of that, I was positively obsessed with receiving the highest grades in every subject and could start crying if missed one single point on a test - oh wow, even I hear how bad this sounds! I turned into quite the vicious cycle - I felt like the only thing that gave me some feeling of self-worth was to be at the top of every class, and making the slightest mistake made the ground beneath my feet crumble. Let me tell you: to flee crying from the classroom for misspelling "connaître" on the French vocabulary quiz does not make a person more popular.
But then again, these are all superficial reasons, and a lot of them probably wouldn't even have been the case if I hadn't been so alone and tormented in the first place. Looking back, I suspect that my situation had a lot to do with the fact that I was way too much. As a girl in my school, the most desirable thing of all was to be adequate, average, just enough: just pretty enough, just quiet enough, just clever enough. Instead, I was the complete opposite. I had the wrong clothes and no idea what that whole makeup thing was all about, talked constantly in class, was annoyingly proud of my excellent grades.
One time, one of the successfully average girls in my class came up to me, lowered her voice and told me, as in confidence: "So, just a piece of advice. When someone asks you what you got on the test, tell them you got a vg minus (b minus), for your own sake. Or better yet, get a vg minus. And also... you should at least tuck your jeans into your socks, that's how we do it now, in case you haven't noticed."
And trust me, I really wanted to be like that. Being popular was so far out of my reach that it never crossed my mind, but I would so have loved to be one of those people who simply blended in. But I couldn't, I honest-to-God could not do it. I had been raised to speak up, to stand up for what I believe in and voice my opinion, to always work hard to be the best at what I was doing. I genuinely had no idea how to conform, to adapt, not to be that person whom everyone despised.
How did you make it through?
All through junior high, I walked around as in a bubble. I was literally counting seconds, focusing on nothing but breathing in, breathing our and then in again. I even had a word for it: "The Dentist Method". I hated going to the dentist, and managed my fear by thinking that "sure, this is painful and horrible now, but soon I will get to spit in that tiny sink and leave the room and it will all be over". Unfortunately, three years are a lot more drawn-out than a visit to the dentist, but I figured the principles were the same. I used to picture the immense relief I would feel walking out through the heavy school doors for the very last time, I held on to that image for dear life.
How I would prevent history from repeating itself in high school, I honestly never gave much thought. One thing at a time. High school would be Future Annika's problem! As long as I was free from the people who made my life a living hell, I'd get a new chance - maybe even succeed at becoming someone completely different. Someone normal.
But the thing that finally saved me was - growing up. Realizing what I want to spend my life doing and finding friends who share my interests and values, who don't think it's pathetic at all to work hard and do your best. Meeting people who love me for me, slowly but surely rebuilding my self-confidence.
Have you had any help dealing with what happened to you?
I've been in and out of therapy for ten years, but it's always been about solving problems here and now, rather than digging up the past. So, I guess the answer is no. I still find it enormously difficult to talk about that time in my life, maybe because I've never into words the things I went through and what it did to me. I don't have that much problem writing about it right now, because all I write is that is was awful and that I'm glad it's over - I don't have to go into any types of details, which means I don't have to force myself to remember. The wounds inside have not healed, but I've learned how to live with them.
How did the years of bullying affect you?
It has shaped me, through and through. For better and for worse. The seven or eight years that followed my junior high school graduation, I was an utter and complete mess. I know the reasons for a person's problems are usually very complex and I'm sure mine were, too, but there is no doubt in my mind that the harassments I had to live with had a lot to do with all of the things that went wrong after that. The moronic decisions I made, my eating disorders, my performance anxiety, my difficulties with getting and keeping friends, my sometimes quite despicable behavior in relationships.
But, on the other hand - I'm eternally grateful for the life I have today, and I know I would never have been exactly here at this very moment if it weren't for everything I've been through. I'm well aware it's a cliché, but that doesn't make it any less true! I'm so glad I didn't manage to adapt and conform, that I kept on being too much, standing up for my beliefs and voicing my opinion. No person I've ever loved or admired has been even close to "average"!
Do you ever wish to get revenge on the people who used to bully you?
My mom always told me, "the best revenge is a good life". And I'm absolutely certain she's right. I've never felt like I should become "successful" to, I don't know, "show them all how wrong they were about me". It didn't take long for me to realize that being in the spotlight would only make the people who used to hate me even more despiteful, and that I couldn't even take that fact into consideration.
The only thing I can do is try to be as happy and content with my life as possible, and not let what's happened to me in the past hold me down. I can honestly say that I don't care one bit about what a bunch of assholes I went to school with half a lifetime ago think of me today.
Really, I don't - but at the same time, the pain is still carved into my heart like the initials of two lovers on the trunk of a tree. Whenever I catch a glimpse of one of my past's worst tormenters - on the bus, in the canned food aisle of a supermarket, on Facebook - I get physically nauseous, dizzy, trouble breathing. Not because I expect them to say anything, but, it's like my body is unable to forget. I become fourteen again and believe I'm going to die. It wouldn't surprise me if that feeling won't ever fully disappear.
But to wrap it up, I do feel like I've gotten my revenge. I work with what I love - writing - and I have the opportunity to use my experiences to help people who are in the same situation that I once was, by writing columns, blogging, participating in this article. In some way, that makes me feel like there might actually have been a point with the whole thing. Like it wasn't for nothing.
What's your advice to other young people struggling with similar issues?
1) Transfer to a different school. Trust me - this is not your fault, you are not the problem. You do not have to put up with being treated this way, or rather, you shouldn't! Sure, you can never be certain that things well be better someplace else, but you can be sure that you can't go on the way things are. To give yourself a fresh start is an opportunity for a life that isn't only bearable, but one that could be absolutely amazing.
2) Do not be ashamed. Easier said than done, I know. For years and years I was so afraid that my new friends would find out what a fraud I was; that I wasn't at all that sweet girl with pretty shoes but a disgusting, pathetic loser. It took a whole lot of time before I understood, really believed, that I had nothing at all to be ashamed of. That what I had been through didn't define me, and that all it did was making me a stronger and more empathic person. Why would I have to be ashamed of that?
Once again - you have not done anything wrong. It's a question of bad luck. You drew a blank in the social lottery in that particular circumstance, but it has nothing to do with you, not one bit. They don't like the way you act, the way you walk, talk or dress? That's their problem. If chance had put you at a different school, the way you act-walk-talk-dress might have been what was considered totally awesome and popular. And you know what? You will find a place where people think you're fantastic. When you do, please make sure that you don't let someone else feel as left out as you once did. Because there's not one right way to be a person who deserves respect and kindness. There are only different contexts and circumstances, and people who are more or less afraid of doing what's right.
The only ones who should be ashamed are the people who make you feel like you're not good enough. But you will get through this and come out the other side as someone better, someone who knows you can survive anything, while they will have to live with the fact that they're scared, cruel, evil cowards who torture others because they don't know any other way to feel like they're a part of something. I know I would rather be a little bit damaged than to know I am - or, if I'm lucky, used to be - a gutless shit.
3. Talk to someone. It sounds obvious, sure, so how come you haven't already? How come I didn't? Well probably because 1) I didn't think they'd take me seriously, 2) I figured there was nothing anyone could do to change my situation so why bother trying, 3) I didn't even want to admit to myself that I was a victim of bullying, much less to someone else, and 4) - I believed I had brought all of this on myself, by being such a hopeless excuse of a person. But I was wrong. Don't make the same mistake I did. Call a hotline, ask to see the school counselor, talk to other people in the same situation in a web forum, anything. You are not alone, even if that's what it feels like, and you should not have to go through this on your own. There is help available and you deserve to get it.
4. Keep breathing. Those godforsaken teenage years are a struggle for nearly everyone, more or less, but the best thing about them is that they won't last forever. After all the hardship an enitre life awaits you, and the only thing you have to focus on is getting there. Do everything in your power to get through the pain, because I promise you: it will get better. Lighter, brighter, easier. And you will know that everything life has put you through so far has turned you into the person you are, and that the person you are is one fabulous human being.
More posts on this subject:
Everything will be okay in the end
You can take your pain and throw it away
Sounds like Kungsholmen's Gymnasium was a lucky break for both of us. Mordhotad var jag aldrig, men livet var ratt surt pa Carlsson/EG om man brydde sig om overordnades pikar. Och det gor man ju saklart.
ReplyDeleteTo a good life!
/Caroline
well said, dear annika!
ReplyDeletehttp://honeybeelane.blogspot.com/
I've read through the whole post and I understand you from the bottom of my heart. At the same time I don't - how could I? Lifes are different and bullies too. But I do understand and I can only assure you that transferring really is the way.
ReplyDeleteI moved to a different village aged 7 to a class with only 11 other pupils. And basically the whole village new each other from the beginning of time. I was an outsider the day I came cause I was not born there. It all started fine. I was at least for a little while "interesting". But too different.I wasn't catholic, my family was chaotic, travelling, literate, I dressed differently. I didn't watch their soaps. And they started hating me for being different. The next three years were torture and if it weren't for my best friend and my mom who always told me to be confident in myself I don't know what would have happened. Then fith grade I came to a different school and found more friends. I got to become one of the cool girls - not because of being bad to others but because everyone was like me. Although the bullies still harrassed me on the bus I came to ignore them and kept my head up high even when they put bubblegum in my hair. A few years later I moved away - only a few kilometers down the hill, but people were so much nicer! I was popular! Now I live in London and I study and do things those idiot villagers can only dream of. I know they know about it and I look down on them when they scan my items at the supermarket till. Whatever you say - revenge is sweet and best served cold.
Oh yeah forgot to add. Just being beautiful as you are must be a slap in all your bullies faces! :D
ReplyDeleteBrave-Heart <3
ReplyDelete// Amanda X
Your such a good role model! Your life story will certainly help a lot of girls. Thank you for taking the time to translate it!
ReplyDeleteKisses
this is an inspirational article. i'm very sorry you had to go through all that and most of us did too. i know junior high and a lot of high school was hell to even try to remember but it does all get better. let those young hearts and minds be at peace and pray for their patience!
ReplyDeleteangie of pandaphilia fashion
I was never bullied, but I have never been able to quite shake the feeling that I am, as you say, simply not a person who people like. And I'm 26 now. It's frustrating.
ReplyDeleteAnnika, I read your whole article and I feel deeply sorry for your past but proud of present Annika at the same time. Although I never had what you had been through but I think I do feel your pain. I never been the most popular girl in high school nor the one who got bullied but I guess that was because I was trying to blend myself in with them and not want to give a second voice. Once in a while I will have my opinion and then going to school feeling nervous. What if they hate me now? Anyway non of this is close to what you been through but I guess that horrible past made the present you. You are great in writing, have absolutely stunning style and you are gorgeous. I truly hope you will have a good life from now on because you love life and you are an amazing person. Good luck to you I'm sending you my love even I never met you.
ReplyDeleteCassandra
I read through this knowing that I would read something I could relate to. I wasn't disappointed. Without going into details nobody cares to know, I know exactly what you mean in almost every the paragraph. I met someone from school recently who seemed not to remember what a misery she made my school life. However we managed to be civil and then I felt like I didn't hate her any more. Definately to live well is the best thing you can do
ReplyDeletefirst of all: thank you so much for translating. this is a very long article and i'm really glad you took the time!
ReplyDeletei read the whole article. i just have to say it, i wish from the bottom of my heart i could just turn back the time and be your friend instead. i'm so sorry for what you have been through. teenagers can be so cruel. i'm kind of so proud of you. because you have become the most admirable woman i could ever imagine. your inner and outer beauty is just unique. you deserve so much all the attention you get. really.
i remember when i was 12 to 15 ( i am not a shy person, really not) i was so insecure about myself and about what other people think about me. i wasn't bullied at all..but i wasn't popular. i had a lot of problems making friends.
now (i am 19 and i'm finished with school in one year) i think that school is just not the most pleasant place. now i'm kind of okay with my classmates somehow, but i would never ever call them my friends. i founded friends somewhere else, friends i can trust and friends who love and accepted me.
friends who CHOSED me because they like me and NOT because i'm in their class and they HAVE TO deal with me.
that's the problem about thar i think. i can't tell you how much i hate those "girl-cliques" at school, starring at me, jelling at me, talking about me.
but i think i'm strong enough to stand above that shit. even if there are days i come home from school, just so sick and tired of this stuff..then i lay into my bed and just sleep and try not to think about. but that is rare..
even though..it's just one LAST year for me. and i'm really ambitious.
my too favourite quotes on that topic:
"you may laugh, but i get the A's" "sucess is the best revenge"
so much love, nastassja
This was so weird to read through because it all felt so familiar. It surprised me that you who are so beautiful got bullied but then I remembered that bullies call people ugly no matter what they are really like.
ReplyDeleteAfter reading this I just went on a long speech with my boyfriend about the general strangeness of the fact that so many of the fashion blogs I read are written by people who were/are nerds. At school I though fashion was silly. The popular kids only cared about names and changed their jackets every few months. Yet now I am 22 I love clothes and fashion and also love comics and books. It's weird isn't it? The way high school measures everything differently from the rest of the world.
Actually I wrote a whole blog post about being a nerd into clothes a while ago if you want to read it.
http://origamigirlheroics.blogspot.com/2011/04/in-which-i-consider-nature-of-fashion.html
Nu tänkte jag svara på engelska men det är ju ondöigt. Så jag tar det på svenska.
ReplyDeleteHerregud Annika, jag läste artikeln och fick ont i hjärtat och sedan så kommer jag in här och så får jag läsa ÄNNU MER. Tack för att du delar med dig. Du är så himla bra. Jag läser det här och jag tycker att du är som Lady Gaga, så himla uppmuntrande och ja, som hon är när hon nämner mobbare och att stå upp för sig själv och så där. Fina du.
Det är fantastiskt att du skriver på engelska om det här, förresten. Det når ut till så himla många fler.
Thank you so much for writing this and sharing it! I understand you and the way you've written this is beautiful. This is the kind of writing that needs to be shared, so many people need to hear this to know the effects that bullying has on teens and to fully understand the importance of kindness in this world. Thank you thank you for sharing :)
ReplyDeleteMy heart cries for you. <3 Thank you for sharing this. I have similar experiences as you, maybe not as bad as you, but I feel you. I broke free at 8th grade and I can still feel the same freedom at age 25. I still remember the first feeling of not caring what others think of me. That was such a special realisation. I'm me and I'm important. There is no need to be as the mass is. I still cherish this feeling I felt years ago. I really am happy in my life and feel sorry for the guys that bullied me.
ReplyDeleteAnd you are special Annika! :) Thank you for your blog. It has became my favorite. It is special for the mind and the eyes!
Sini
This was a truly amazing article. I didn't have friends at all until I was in my sophomore year of high school and was bullied, even through my first year of college. After reading your blog for maybe a month or two, you seem to have an incredible life and are very happy (At least it seems to be that way!) It's really an inspiration to have someone be so positive after such a rough time through school and not dwell on it, saying "Oh poor me bawwww".
ReplyDeleteOh Annika - I've read this post all the way through and I don't know what to say. I wish everyone who was/is in this situation could read this and understand that it WILL get better and that it's OK to ask for help. You are such a role model and such an inspiration to me. I love your mum's advice - the best revenge is a good life. I'm pretty sure I'll be using it many times in the future! Annika - you are amazing.
ReplyDeleteAlexandra xx
You are a true inspiration and I think this post will help so many people. I went through something similar when I was 15-17 years old. And I also tried therapy too. I feel like I'll never be as confident as I used to be and I'm so incredibly wary of everyone and everything, but i try think of that time as a positive thing - as if "everything happens for a reason". I'm sad at how I look back at my teen years and it was such a mess. But you're right in so many things that you've said in this article. It has helped me. Thank you x
ReplyDeletei thought i would just read a few lines tonight and keep the rest of the article for tomorrow ; but just like when I read a good book, I couldn't stop until getting through the end.
ReplyDeleteIt just made me think that you are in some way lucky to have lived this experience. Though it was hard, while reading your story, I was just thinking : people who fake being average don't get the chance to know what it is living being themselves.. which is probably the best thing i have learnt from feeling I was at the wrong place.
Btw, I'm sooo impressed that you are so much willing to help other people and tell them not to forget about doing the same.
Nothing to do with that, but if you would have time, could you make a Q&A post someday? everytime I'm reading your post, I feel like I would have a dozen questions to ask you if I was given the chance..
Agreed... It's impossible not to read every single word you write... this post will touch so many people... I could go on forever, but you know how I feel! I think you are incredible and i love you. The world is lucky to have such an insanely gorgeous-in every-way role model! xxx
ReplyDeleteYou write so beautifully!
ReplyDeleteI understand you. I really was not bullied but I transferred so many times that it was hard to fit it. I was shy didn't speak the language and I was tiny.
Thanks you so much for sharing this with us!
Anyways, I mean who would not want to be your friend??? You are an amazing person and I can just tell by looking at your photographs. Every single one of your posts titles puts a smile on my face and you are so inviting with your writing. Lovely!
Love you Annika,
Samira
I was bullied, frozen out, and the details of the story don't matter because the feelings are the same. It was a very difficult time for me, and every day I just thought to get through it, waiting for the end (even though I never knew what would happen beyond that).
ReplyDeleteBut still, I wouldnt for the world have wanted to be, or be with those other girls.
Those other girls that went out at night to the park drinking alcohol. Those other girls that fooled around with the guys. Those other girls that talked bullshit about each other behind each others backs...
I kept my integrity, and didn't make bad decisions I'd later try to rationalize after drinking too much alcohol.
I didn't compromise my own dignity by doing things I didn't want to because of peer pressure. I had my values, stuck by them, and was shunned for it.
Its extremely difficult to live without friends. Without any social interaction for years except your family. But it beats being someone your not ANY day.
I don't regret being myself, staying true to myself and my values, even though that's what set me apart all my life. If the crowd doesn't accept me as I am, then I would walk away from the crowd.
True that nobody likes a show off, and thats true for all ages! Even in the work environment you need subtle ways to stand out (referring to "On top of that, I was positively obsessed with receiving the highest grades in every subject and could start crying if missed one single point on a test - oh wow, even I hear how bad this sounds!") but thats a lesson of moderation, and maybe something you learnt the hard way.
I still believe that you were fully in your right to be the way you were. Everyone else was wrong to bully you for it (I'm not saying it should have been encouraged) but you shouldn't have been bullied for it.
I think bullying happens to people who stick out from the crowd, and dare to be different. People are scared of it. Scared of personalities they fear may outshine their own superficial ones.
I know, you know, and everyone who has grown up knows it will end. We all find our niche in life eventually, we find happiness with who we are.
But what I do want to say is, when that time comes where you finally accept and are happy with yourself despite others, it will be HELL of a lot more satisfying reaching that point knowing you didn't compromise along the way, knowing you stuck by your values, your true self.
I am in my senior year of high school, at a very conservative, Christian school. these kids have known each other their whole lives; their parents have grown up together, and probably their grandparents too. I never fit in, but I did try. Finally, I've gotten to a stage where I have just stopped caring. now, everybody knows my name, they know that I don't honestly give a shit. I guess deep down, it hurts knowing that I'm never going to have friends from high school, but your article helped me because I know that things will get better. and I will get my revenge, just like you.
ReplyDeleteI actually completely understand how you feel, although my bullying never went as far as death threats, I was treated pretty wretched throughout nearly my entire schooling life.
ReplyDeleteWhen I was little I was such an outsider, I had one friend and even she was happy with someone else's company. I was always a really good drawer and I will never forget the day that I traded a picture with a boy in my class so he'd let me play hide and seek with him and his friends at lunch.
When I moved away, I started a new school and found a great group of friends, but still I'd always be the left out one and they'd constantly play nasty childish games like running away from me in the playground etc etc. As we all got older, it got worse. I've always been a little shy, especially around boys so as they got older and started smoking, drinking and sleeping around I became even more isolated because I had absolutely no interest in any of those things. After three years of feeling constantly left out and hated I moved groups in school. I'm lucky because my story has a happy ending, I found a great group of friends who loved me to pieces and I got to finish school with some happy memories, there were still nasty rumors about me and all my friends that were spread by the 'popular girls'. There was a HUGE one that went around that we were all lesbians because we all had short hair...girls can be so catty!
I think it's incredibly brave, and really inspiring for any girls who might be suffering through something like you did, to share your experiences. I feel honored that you would trust/love us readers enough to share something so personal.
Much love,
Laura (http://wrinkleintimevintage.blogspot.com)
PS- Can you please tell your sister that she looks absolutely stunning with her new do :)
Annika, you are the sweetest. I absolutely adore your style of writing about sad things in life - I feel it all. (AND I adore your face.) You are my favourite blogger right now.
ReplyDeleteCheers,
bzu
I can't imagine that a girl as beautiful as you had such a problem... but luckily it was a long ago. you're beautiful!!
ReplyDelete♥♥
ReplyDeleteDet här var så himla fint och rörande och bra, Annika! Och dessutom så himla sant. Jag har aldrig blivit mobbad men jag har haft en del av samma problem som du har och jag kan verkligen relatera till det du skriver.Jag var också den där tjejen i skolan som alla kallade för "pluggis" för att jag alltid fick bästa betygen och för att jag alltid stolt sa att jag satt hemma och pluggade varje kväll. But you know what they say, det är oftast de som är nördar under skoltiden som sen blir de coolaste som vuxna.
ReplyDeleteOch du bevisar ju än en gång att det är sant.
puss<3
xoxo
<3
ReplyDeleteDu skriver så ärligt om det att jag blir rörd. Helt mållös blir jag. Men jag vill ändå lämna några ord och tala om hur bra du är Annika, och hur fantastiskt det är att du vågar, vill och orkar skriva om detta. Jag hoppas du känner ett enormt stöd från alla pojkar och flickor som varit i samma sits, eller som engagerar sig i frågan. Igenkänningsfaktor i det du skriver är hög.
ReplyDelete"When you do, please make sure that you don't let someone else feel as left out as you once did."
ReplyDeleteDet där är så otroligt du.
Jag minns när jag först hittade till din blogg. This was way back, när din bloggadress var beautifulones, och i stället för att demonstrera dagens outfit ute i det gröna så befann du dig i vad som såg ut att vara någon slags källarlokal. Vid något tillfälle postade du ett youtubeklipp på dig själv när du poserade i en gigantisk pälsmössa till Brett Andersons popdadaism: "Cracked up, stacked up, 22, psycho for sex and glue." Och jag minns hur jag tänkte: "Goodness. Pretty, pretty, pretty woman."
Så jag började följa din blogg, och blev smått överrumplad över tonen i dina inlägg. De var alltid lika ödmjuka, alltid lika konstruktiva och framför allt: så påfallande sympatiska. Till och med när någon hater gödslade bland dina kommentarer höll du så häpnadsväckande god ton. Det här var som sagt långt innan jag visste någonting alls om dig, och det var därför jag blev så förvånad: "Någon som ser ut så där", resonerade grottmänniskodelen av min hjärna, "behöver inte vara så där godhjärtad och snäll; hon kan bete sig hur illa hon vill och folk kommer ändå kriga om hennes uppmärksamhet."
Sedan kom en period då du blev väldigt personlig. Du nämnde några händelser från skolåren (som jag faktiskt väljer att inte återge här utifall det är något som för närvarande inte besvärar ditt medvetande och som du inte är särskilt sugen på att bli påmind om), saker som ger mig rysningar när jag tänker på dem; hur vansinnigt elaka människor faktiskt är benägna att vara mot varandra.
När jag läste de där personliga inläggen minns jag hur jag tänkte: "Gode gud, efter allt den här människan har gått igenom har hon all rätt att hata världen, att bete sig som ett as mot andra människor. Rätt eller fel går naturligtvis att diskutera - men JAG hade åtminstone inte klandrat henne om hon hade gett upp hoppet om mänskligheten och valt att leva sitt liv som ett egoistiskt monster."
För ibland verkar det vara menat att fungera på det sättet. Chefen tar ut sin frustration på en anställd som åker hem och låter frustrationen gå ut över sin partner som låter frustrationen gå ut över sitt barn som låter frustrationen gå ut över sin skolkamrat.
Jag har nog aldrig riktigt hört talas om någon som faktiskt lever efter orden: "Bara för att någon annan beter sig dåligt så betyder det inte att du också måste göra det." Bortsett från du.
Den här världen har betett sig jävligt illa mot dig - men trots det är du den mest sympatiska individ jag någonsin har stött på. "When you do, please make sure that you don't let someone else feel as left out as you once did." Så, återigen: Det där är så otroligt du. Alltid lika mån om att människor omkring dig ska ha det bra. Du förtjänar guld, baske mig, människa. (Men tills vidare får du nöja dig med att jag röstar på dig på VeckoRevyn.)
Grymt bra skrivet Annika! Jag minns att en stor anledning till att jag inte ville byta till ett annat gymnasium fast jag mådde illa av att en gå upp på morgonen för att åka in till skolan, var "de-får-inte-som-de-vill"-tanken. Och det värsta av allt, med mobbing alltså, det är enligt mig hur NORMALT det är i vårt svenska samhälle. Tjejerna som hade mobbat mig då kunde höra av dig på Facebook eller liknande flera år efteråt. Som om ingenting hade hänt! Och ännu äckligare - vissa av dem blev lärare, jurister, ja folk som ska jobba med rättvisa. Skitsamma, det jag menar är att ditt inlägg är viktigt, hoppas det följer en uppföljning på hur man ska förebygga mobbing, INNAN det gått för långt.
ReplyDeleteYou are so brave to write about this unfortunately common problems.
ReplyDeleteReminds me of Jens Lekmans Happiness Will Be My Revenge:
http://open.spotify.com/track/7f3K6FcMelX6sHqguPCH9F
Thank you for sharing ♥
Hej Annika.
ReplyDeleteVad är det för fel med att vara vanlig eller genomsnittlig? Det verkar ju nästan som att dina erfarenheter har påverkat dig så att du ser ner på dem som uppfattas som "vanliga" av andra människor. Gillar du bara det vackraste och smarta folket som dessutom är 100% ambitiös i allt de gör? White trash är inget för dig väl?
Sofia, är det den uppfattning du får av den här texten har du sannerligen bestämt dig på förhand för att missförstå och ansträngt dig för att vara föraktfull. Så väldigt tråkigt att det är din inställning.
ReplyDeleteI feel like our experiences have been exactly the same. I identify with every single word you've written. From the experience itself to how I feel now about it. From how it shaped me as the person I am now to all the process in between. I absolutely adore your blog and your writing. Keep on doing what you do. It's amazing.
ReplyDeleteLots of besos fron this Spanish reader!!
This is beautiful, and you're beautiful on the inside and out. In my experience simple minded people that bully are unable to accept people that are different from themselves. they grow so used to all being one and the same, all blending into the same monochromatic cliche that they persecute anyone that dares stand out. if they're lucky, they'll grow up and have harsh reality checks as adults, or else stay exactly the same, and that is the sadder for them. You couldn't have said it better that the best revenge is a good life, not in the sense of showing off, but rather enjoying your life for yourself.
ReplyDeletejust discovered your blog via lookbook and it's lovely, as are you :)
<3 anastasiya
http://atimelymystique.blogspot.com