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Writer's pictureYours Truly

They Don't Call Them Asylums Anymore (Part III-Sad Girl's First Word)

Updated: Aug 25, 2020


~ ⚠️Trigger Warning: The following poem contains subject matter pertaining to self-harm, suicide, and involuntary psychiatric hospitalization⚠️

~

Tenth grade:


I am standing in the foyer

with my friends

before the bell rings.


From my sailor's mouth:

a bluster of salt and curse words.


My friends are so used

to hearing me swear,

that I believe they have become

desensitized to the variations of "fuck"

that whistle through my teeth.


Today, I use a

word

I have never said in front of them before.


Their eyes flash

with holier-than-thou

disapproval.


I understand how my language

may be construed as being offensive.


And, truly, I mean no harm.


But truly,

does that make me less than?


(Maybe it does.)


I've never been like them.


I am not pristine.


I am all edge.


Cut from sea glass,

composed of atoms having split

and drowned in their

self-perpetuated monsoons.


My voice is not a siren song.


It is the stuff

of brine and hurricane.


I ask:

are you mad at me?


"I mean--I don't like hearing it..."


(Yes.)


"It's just sort of disrespectful."


(So you are mad at me.)


This type of shame

can only be alleviated

through means of punishment.


During English class,

I go to the bathroom.


Into my left forearm,

I carve the word

BITCH,

its lines written

in barbed-wire cursive.

Like a trigger-happy Etch A Sketch,

I create haphazardly.


When I get home that evening,

my parents, having received a phone call

from the school that afternoon,

tell me we are going to the hospital.


(Clarification:

I am going to the hospital,

they are only taking me there.)


Post phone call,

my father had contacted

Alberta Health Services.

The representative he had spoken to

told him that it was necessary

that I go to the hospital

and that if I didn't comply,

he should call 911,

wherein the paramedics

would take me by force.


I am in awe that

this stranger has the power

to tell me where I must go

before I am even aware

of their existence.


After screaming

and sobbing

and swearing--

one of the words being

the cuss that initiated

this series of events

in the first place--

I finally surrender.


On the ride to the hospital,

I listen to "A Car, a Torch, a Death"

by Twenty One Pilots.


The air begins to feel a little thin As I start the car, and then I begin To add the miles piled up behind me I barely feel a smile deep inside me

And I begin to envy the headlights driving south I want to crack the door so I can just fall out



I cinch the vinyl of the seatbelt

between my fingers the entire way there.

Because, in this instance,

the seatbelt is my enemy

so I keep her closer

to me than my own skin.


(But I am not sure

if I really did this

or if my emotion

exploits my memory.)


We arrive.


Still hysterical,

I grab a fistful of snow

before we pass through the doors.


A guffaw verging on maniacal

escapes from my chapped lips:


What if this is my

last chance

to touch snow,

to inhale the crispness of November

before I am locked up?


(What if they lock me up?)


I step out of the queue

and into the nurse's station.

My parents explain

what I've done to myself

and the nurse asks me how I feel.


"Angry,"

I say.


"Why are you angry?"


"Because I've been brought here against my will."


When the ER doctor

has finished her interrogation,

she says that a psychologist

will be with me shortly.


"I'm going to do homework while I wait,"

I tell her, defiance tugging at my vocal cords,

"Because I am going to school tomorrow."


I bullshit my way through

the rest of my assessment

with the psychologist,

try to sound the least suicidal as possible

while also making it exponentially clear

that admitting me involuntarily--

isolating me from the rest of society--

would only intensify my depression.


They let me go.


One of the doctors--

or maybe it was a nurse--

makes a comment

that I can't fully remember.


All I know is that I reply with:

"No, I'm still pretty pissed,"

to which the doctor (nurse?)

tells me that my parents did the right thing

and that my anger is unwarranted.


And I am just so fucking exhausted

with these people who treat me

like I'm some backward

music box ballerina.


I figure eight in the direction

opposite of the world

spinning on its axis.


They do not like

this backward girl--

this warped record

whose lyrics seem unfathomable.


So they close

the top of the music box

and I no longer play

the leading role of my own life--

I am just some small, porcelain thing

collecting dust in silence.

 

Image Source:

Statue of woman in snow gif (n.d.). [image] Available at: http://rebloggy.com/post/gif-snow-dark-myedits-statue-angel/47771606151

[Accessed 12 Aug. 2019].

 
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