September 7, 2013
In 2011, when I was inpatient at Hazelden, I noticed something about myself: whenever we got a new patient, Iâd behave just a little more âoutrageously.â Like â the things that came out of my mouth were a little more shocking, absurd, or over the top. I very much had a need to let new people know that I was a character. And I realized that it wasnât a new behavior; the settings varied, but I had been acting this way all my life.
That realization really upset me and I resolved to change immediately. I didnât need anything else on my (already) long list of shit donât like about myself. Some people responded well to those antics, but Iâm sure there were plenty more that were thoroughly annoyed. Granted, treatment is the kind of intimate environment where â so long as youâre not totally shut down â people will learn to spot your bullshit and see through to âthe real youâ pretty quickly (whether they want to or not) and that meant the only real consequence of my acting out was to be initially disliked. [I remember deciding at one point that four to five days (for someone to come around and not hate me) was the standard rule]. Still, I didnât wanna stomach that feeling for any days if I didnât have to.
Once Iâm comfortable somewhere, I can conduct myself more consciously; I can elect to play the clown or choose to be more authentic. But when Iâm the new kid, Iâm really shy, quiet, and usually lie silently as I absorb the dynamic. But I move fast. That ânew-kid phaseâ is usually only twelve to twenty-four hours. After all, Iâm pretty desperate for attention, pretty much all the time [as sad (and uncomfortable to admit) as that is].
About twenty-one hours after my arrival at Tranquil Shores, weâre taken to an arcade for our âcommunity event.â In the van afterward, riding back, I asked about some of the past community events.
âWe went to the roller rink, but probably for the last time. Debbie fell and cracked her head. There was blood everywhere, and kids, andâŠâ
Holy shit! What a fantastic image! I pictured little kids slipping around a roller rink as a pool of blood spread across the floor. I couldnât contain myself and shared my delight with my new peers. Everyone laughed and someone joked, âNobody let this kid near any scissors.â I responded with mock indignation, âHEY â just âcause I like to roller skate sideways through blood â doesnât make me a cutter.â That really cracked everyone up. I was pretty pleased with myself. (More so than was warranted butâŠ)
Either way, I quickly discovered that it wasnât going to take four or five days for these people to not hate me. I felt accepted, by both the clients and staff, almost immediately. And while there were certainly moments when I tested that acceptance (and consequently felt like a misfit or an outcast again) really, it only increased as my stay went on [the exact reverse of every past experience]. To this day, Iâve never felt more accepted or appreciated anywhere than I have at Tranquil Shores. And though that had very little to do with my dumb jokes, that moment in the van was when I first started to feel it.
Fast-forward eight months or so: Iâm at Indie Market, feeling very not pleased with myself. The âskating sideways through bloodâ thing came to mind and I wanted to recapture the feeling of that day. I picked up my brush and started to paint, but it wasnât going well. Nothing was looking as it had in my head and I was beginning to feel frustrated (to an absolutely irrational degree). But I was trying so hard to not be that way. I wanted so badly to be better and stronger than that. Instead of giving up entirely, I moved colors, distorted shapes, and started writing about art and my frustration with the commercial end. I had become incredibly prolific but nobody was buying my work; I felt like a factory, spewing shit no one cared about. And I had spent a bunch of money on frames, thinking theyâd help âlegitimizeâ my work in the eyes of strangers at Indie Market (and increase sales) but no one was buying anything. I was burnt out and annoyed with myself for posting every new piece of art on Facebook. Itâd be one thing to shamelessly promote a product no one was interested in â it was worse that the product was (essentially) me.
I needed to sell my art it because someone told me I had âwhat it takesâ to be an artist and I had allowed myself to believe them. I was afraid of letting them down and even more terrified that I was letting myself down â terrified of being wrong, of not having what it takes. In hindsight, it was all insane. I had only moved out of Tranquil Shores five or six weeks prior â and I had only started painting and drawing a few months before that. To have sold anything in that timeframe was fucking remarkable.
The last sentence (âItâs better than Cymbaltaâ): I donât know if I really believed it as the letters formed on the canvas but â as soon as they had â I know that I did. Thatâs when I started to feel better. And â as if the universe was offering a direct rebuttal to all my negative thinking â within a few weeks I had sold eight paintings â including this one.
Iâd say that, every so often, someone really ought to kick the shit out of me but I already do such a great job of it myself. But in my better moments, I do have gratitude. I do see how lucky Iâve been. How blessed I am. Iâm not sure exactly what that means, but I feel it and itâs real.
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Related entries:
- Trying to Be a Light – re: desperately trying to be better
- I Am Not as Interesting as I Think I Am – re: frustration with my own self-promotion
- Getting Greedy – re: my experience at Indie Market, the day I painted Roller Skating Sideways Through Blood
- Free From Shoes, Expectations, and Toothpaste –Â re: my next (much more successful) art market
- Pulp – re: beating the shit out of myself (literally, in this case)
- Clarity – re: Cymbalta, psychiatric medications, and the last time I tried to kill myself