Wednesday, March 14, 2018

PCOS

Its pointless.

The more I try, the harder I fall

Every door out of this suffocating madness leads me back to where I started
I've eaten my chances away

Just sitting here in decay

I will watch myself die

Slowly

One calorie at a time

Until I am consumed by the monster inside
Fight!

They said

So I did.

7 years and 150 pounds heavier, and im

Still

Fighting.

Counting calories, pills, strict dieting.

Starvation, binging, purging, passing out

Throwing up...ive been through it all.

The only thing left to try is surgery, or death.

But im too poor for surgery.
I dont deserve life.

My body works against me

Reminding me constantly of my reflection

My body wants me to die.
I run, and my body screams in rebellion. Painfully reminding me to sit my fat ass

Down

My skin betrays me.
I run and my mind cries out in protest

Reminding me that everyone is looking

At the fat girl on the elliptical

Who doesnt belong.
I diet. I work out. I reduce my stess

I do everything right.

Or maybe im doing it all wrong.

Something isnt right.
My womb closed, robbing me of my womanhood.

My stomach inflates like a balloon

My chin develops hairs

My skin dries

My feet ache

My heart races

My head hurts

My eyes twitch

Im tired

Im broken

Im fat

Im disgusting

I dont even recognize myself

This body is foreign to me...

A reminent of who i used to be

I dont even want to be a woman anymore

I cant look at myself.
I cant fight

So i sit in isolation

Waiting for my fate to come to pass

I urge my early death

Feeding the beast with comfort food, tears, and sleep.
Diagnosed disorders dont make them

Go away

They just have a name.

The beast thats been eating me since i was born is not he or she...but they.

They are many.
Depression

Disordered eating

HS

High blood pressure

Obesity

Morbid. Thats the worst kind.
PCOS


Its all because of four, incurable letters

Monday, October 23, 2017

The day I decided to leave

    
     Fox News blasted on the TV as I sat studying in my room, I heard my Dad yelling again at the screen, going on some inaudible tirade about immigration and communism. I walked out of my room into the kitchen and sat down for dinner. My family stared at each other and awkwardly made small conversation until my dad brought up some article about feminism; a topic I was passionate about. Our discussion quickly developed into a heated debate, so the table cleared and my dad eventually stormed off into his room. He retired to his room often after our “little talks”, reclusively brooding in depression and anger as if he was somehow losing me. See, my parents have always placed their worth in the successes of their children, and I had proven time and time again that I would be their one greatest failure; for my father, that meant that he was a failure too.

     I walked up the stairs to use the office computer and sat down to my father’s Facebook page, still left open. I saw a message from my brother and clicked. At that moment, my heart stopped; any semblance of an image I had built for myself was destroyed, and I knew I had to grow up. My brother Jonathan was a southern Baptist preacher currently attending seminary, but Jonathan was also a millennial with a savvy set of tech skills including online stalking. In his escapades, Jonathan found my hidden profiles and screenshotted “evidence” of my sexuality, and shared them with my parents along with a heartfelt message suggesting that disowning me was “my only hope for salvation” and that I should be forced to deal with the consequences of my “choice”. The consequences, however, were such that I, a 17-year-old kid, felt an overwhelming sense of fear that sent me first down to my room to pack my bags, say goodbye to my brothers, and then stand at the edge of the back-porch balcony with my parent’s home phone in hand, pondering whether to call someone, or just jump.

     In tears, I raised the phone up to my ear and called the Trevor Project, a suicide hotline for LGBT Youth in crisis. A middle-aged woman picked up the phone. Her voice was monotone and dry as she spoke those lifesaving words, “How can I help you?”. She didn’t want to be on the phone with me, but she was the only hope I had left. I explained my situation in a panic, confessed my thoughts of ending it all, and begged her for an answer, but what I got was not what I expected.

“Lie.”

She said, and explained that the only way I was going to get out of this situation was to be safe, and if that meant I needed to lie and fake it for just a few more months until I could get on my feet, that is what I would have to do. So, at that moment I decided to lie.

     I spent years of my adolescence struggling with my sexuality, and I had finally accepted it! After so many sleepless nights of ‘praying the gay away’, summers spent at Christian camps meant to enforce traditional values, phone calls and sessions with pastors and ex-gay ministers, and journals full of entries describing my bitter self-loathing, I finally started to love myself enough to accept this part of me I had been fighting to deny my entire life. So, I did the only thing I knew how to do; lie. I confronted my brother about what he said, and informed him that I had miraculously changed. I sat my father down and explained the situation, then vowed to try my best to become straight. My father saw my insincerity and simply requested that I keep silent about the whole thing until I leave the house. I saw the light in his eyes diminish as he realized that, at least from his point of view, he had lost his daughter.

     March 26, 2016, was the day my world collapsed, but I built a new one. I became motivated by observing the ignorance and fear around me, so I left home a week after my 18th birthday, worked for a year, and then I decided to pursue a career studying Psychology with a focus on sociology, and how gender and sexuality work with both. I learned the real meaning of love through people like my sister who helped me leave and now supports me regardless of our disagreements, and my partner, who has become my family and my new and beautiful home. 

Saturday, September 30, 2017

An Argument Against Prophesy

 Below is the first of a collection of essays I would like to share with you! enjoy! 

***Disclaimer, I don't actually completely agree with this point of view, I am taking the position of someone who does not believe for the purpose of being "the devil's advocate", and to practice debate skills :) ***

     “The end is near!” the old scraggly man shouted. This old man is not the only kind of person who touts the gift of divine intuition, in fact, people of all kinds have declared the end of the world since the world began. From the apocalypse, to disease, war and famine, it seems that prophesy through the ages brings one message; doom. No matter how convincing, we cannot let ourselves be led by fear, or the undeniable doom that awaits, instead we should take every measure to preserve ourselves, and never believe blindly.
     The film directed its message at a public who are easily led using fear, mob mentality and splendor. The film discusses prophesy from a historical perspective, presenting fact, and using credible sources, but there still seems to be a sense that the audience should err on the side of believing. Towards the end of the film, we see that “prophesy” in the narrator’s eyes is really a set of predictable warnings instead of a spiritual premonition, and uses the guise of prediction to incite change. There is a very important difference between prediction and prophesy. Prediction is a guess based on fact, prophesy is a perversion of that guess with a means to an end.
    If we relate prophesy to science, we can see that it is based on the law of entropy, “everything tends to disorder.” It is easy then to make a prediction that something bad is going to happen. Humanity tends to repeat itself, so it is logical to conclude that when prophets make a prediction, they either consciously or subconsciously base their “intuitions” on the ideas of science, history, logic and psychology. Those who may dissent this evaluation may say that the accuracy and frequency of prophetic records prove that there must be some sort of spiritual or supernatural guide, and that because something was true, its premises must also be true. This argument leaves out the occurrence of self-fulfilling prophesy, that if someone believes something hard enough, it will eventually come true in some form.

     In conclusion, the power of prophesy is obvious, and the happenings recorded cannot be denied, but when we use reasoning, we can explain what may be happening in a more tangible way. We as a human race cannot let our lives be manipulated by fear, so whether prophesy or prediction may be true or not, the most important thing is that we are each individually and collectively skeptical of it. We cannot be led by fear, or the undeniable doom that awaits, instead we should take every measure to preserve ourselves, and never believe blindly.