The Nature of Hatred

So I’ve been watching a lot of Scandal recently (great show, totally recommend it) and watching Fitz and Olivia, which I totally don’t approve of by the way, has had me thinking a lot about the nature of hatred and what it really means to hate someone.

Now, I believe that people are born unaligned. I don’t think anyone is totally good or totally bad when they’re born, they develop that sense on their own over time. Babies can be douchebags. They pull your hair and they’re selfish, but they also like for you to hold them and they’re sweet. Then, as they grow up they are taught the difference between what’s right and wrong and, depending on their personalities and their outlook on the world, they begin acting on those principles accordingly.

This leaves plenty of room for a wide range of different people, anywhere from saint to evil, and nobody is ever quite the same. People develop different tastes and preferences, different personalities and identities, and no person is ever exactly the same as someone else. There are two things, though, that are universal and connect everyone together, and those are compassion and empathy.

These two traits are shared by everyone in the world, although some may have more than others. Everyone has the instinct of looking at something and understanding or identifying with it. It doesn’t even have to be another person. It could be the sad, hungry-looking stray dog you pass by on the street or, if you’re like me, the one stuffed animal that’s sitting alone away from all the other ones. You feel bad for it, you want to help, or celebrate if the situation is different. This instinctual feeling of connection and understanding is what makes us human, in my opinion anyway.

I don’t think it’s possible to hate someone. Or, if it is, it’s crazy difficult. When you hate someone, you hate them. You make the conscious decision to hate everything about them. You can’t feel empathy or compassion for them, you have to give that up entirely. By doing that, you’re no longer looking at them with any semblance of respect. They are worth less to you than a stuffed animal, if the case above can apply to you. You can no longer feel bad when someone they love dies or if they’re experiencing heart-wrenching trauma, you can’t feel anything for them anymore except for hatred. By doing that, you give up the one thing about yourself that connects you to every other person on the planet. You have to give up what makes you human, your own humanity, just to hate someone.

I don’t think that’s possible. It shouldn’t be possible, and if it is I wouldn’t expect anyone to want to do it. I couldn’t. I couldn’t give up my humanity for someone else, especially if I didn’t like them. Could you?

~Sara

Oral Hygiene: It’s Important

So, I’ve been gone for a while now, but, hey, life happens. Also, college is a thing.

These past three weeks have been a weird, stressful, emotional roller coaster and honestly I think I’m still trying to process it. I moved out of my house. My college classes started a little over a week ago. A week before that my grandma died.

Quick warning: stuff’s about to get heavy.

I haven’t addressed it. It’s been two weeks and I haven’t addressed it and I feel like I should. I haven’t talked to anybody about it, except to tell someone that it happened, and I have a bad track record with keeping things bottled up. So, in keeping with my goal of using my time at college to become a better person, I’m going to try to chip away at that problem and open up.

It’s been hard. Or, I guess it kind of hasn’t. It was hard at first, a definite shock, but after that first night I kind of blocked it out. I remember that my dad and my sister came and got me, told me that grammy had died, and that we had to drive to her house to meet my mom. Let me just tell you, shock is very real. It may be hard to understand and you may be a little skeptical if you’ve never experienced it (as was I), but after you do you’ll never doubt again. I was in shock. After a few minutes of sitting in silence, though, I just started to cry. They were such weird tears, too. They were the kind of tears you see actors cry in movies that you think are so obviously fake because they don’t do anything that everyone normally does when they cry. When you think of crying you think of sniffling and sobbing sounds, and squinched faces. Just a general aura of deep sadness. But those actors don’t do anything except stare straight ahead with a blank face as their tears fall, so that can’t be real, right? Wrong. Those are the worst kind of tears. Those are the tears when you know something affects you so deeply that, even though you can’t process it yet, your subconscious already knows how to react. You don’t even feel sad, your body is just doing it by itself. It knows that if you were thinking correctly you would be crying, so it just figures it’ll have your back and just go ahead and do it. That’s when you know something is going to hurt a lot.

The silence was horrendous, too. Everyone was quiet and that silence felt physically heavy. It was like it was pressing in on me from all sides, like it was hard to breathe. And suddenly I just had this burning need to get out of the car, to escape that silent pressure. I needed to talk to somebody, needed to take away the silence. I needed to call my friend.

Dustin, who’s been my friend longer than anyone else. We’ve been best friends since 4th grade and somehow managed to stay in contact all this time, despite all the moving around we’ve both done. He’s the funniest person I know and some part of me knew at that moment that I needed him. When we pulled up at the house, I walked out to the garage and called him. He sounded so happy when he picked up (we hardly talk on the phone) and I felt bad that I was probably going to ruin his day, but as soon as I heard his voice I broke down. And he listened to me sob over the phone while I told him what happened. He told me he was sorry and asked me how my family was doing, specifically my mom. Then he started talking about other stuff, just random things to keep my mind off of things. We talked about how he was going to break the record for having the most children, how we were going to both become poor English teachers and live off the kids’ salaries and his brother’s eventual musical career, how we’re gonna get married when we’re old and live above the country bakery I’ll open. And it was just what I needed. There’s just no room to feel sad when you’re laughing.

That’s the reason I threw myself into YouTube again. Anyone know any great Let’s Players? Chilled Chaos? Seananners? Cryaotic? Cry’s the best, let me tell you. Those guys might as well be my family. I go to them anytime I’m feeling unlucky or depressed, whenever I need a good laugh in general. They’re always there playing games, joking around and being happy. It’s easier to feel happy when you’re watching someone else be happy. They’ve helped me through some tough times. YouTube is a godsend.

Then my uncle came down from Oregon, only the second time I’ve physically seen him. It was easy not to feel sad then. I even put together the slideshow of pictures of my grandma to show at the funeral and it wasn’t hard. But then the funeral came around. I was fine then, too, until the man stood up at the front and started talking. And I crumbled. Mirisa was there, which was good. I needed that support. Then the funeral ended and we went to the outside room for people to come give us their condolences and I had to leave. I find it extremely difficult to cry in front of people and show that vulnerability, so when I saw the first person coming I hugged my dad and ran to the bathroom. I collected myself as I looked in the mirror, then went back out after most of the people had already left. I’ve been fine since then, with the exception of right now when I’m writing this.

We still go over to her house and it feels empty. I have pictures of her up on my dorm room wall and when I look at them I have this weird feeling that I can’t quite explain. They feel empty, kind of like the house. Any pictures of her feel like ghosts. I had a nightmare the other night about her ghost coming back and haunting me and my sister. Now, that messed me up. She’s the first person in my life that’s died that I’ve had any attachment to and that’s a weird adjustment to make to your view of the world. I still feel sad when I look at pictures of her, but it’s some foreign sort of sadness that I’ve never felt before. Almost like a hollow kind of sadness where, if you were to look inside of me, a part of me empties out when I look at the pictures.

I try not to think about it too much because it makes me sad, but it’s hard to think about all the stuff that’s going to happen to me that she won’t get to see. She saw me graduate, but she won’t get to see my sister. She won’t get to see either of us graduate college or get married. She won’t ever be a great-grandma. She was so concerned about my moving away to college, but she never got to say goodbye.

I feel so bad for my roommate right now. She’s getting ready to go out tonight and I know the sniffling sounds coming from my side of the room are anything but pretty right now. I’m almost done though, so at least there’s that. Sorry, Brit.

I guess I’m going to leave off with giving that old advice that everyone gives after experiencing the after effects of death. Don’t wait around. You don’t know what’s going to happen or when, so don’t put off telling someone something because you assume you’ll have the chance to tomorrow. That’ll just lead to regrets, and those are the cavities to your life candy. They’ll just grow and get worse with time, causing more and more pain. You can’t enjoy candy with cavities and you know they won’t make your teeth look better. So, just remember to brush your teeth, kids, with…uh…words I guess? Heartfelt confessions? Something like that. Tell someone you love them and give them a smile every day, even if you feel like crap. If anything, you’ll brighten at least one other person’s world and that should be worth it.

That’s it. Thanks for sticking around if you did. I kind of feel like pretty much all of my posts are really heavy, and I’m sorry if you’re not into that, but that’s just the stuff that’s easy for me to write about. That’s the kind of stuff that feels real to me, so that’s the kind of stuff I want to share. I don’t want to lie to you guys because I love you. Yes, this random girl you’ve never met loves you. Deal with it. Also, you’re beautiful. Goodnight.

P.S. Did anyone read the title and become quickly confused when you actually started reading the post? Because that’s awesome. Your teeth are important though, so get on that.

~Sara

Single is the New Black

You know what? Being a teenage girl is hard. Don’t let anyone tell you different, because they’re lying to you. Imagine Sharknado, but with boys, makeup, and the most angst you’ll ever feel. Ever.

I could go on all day about the unrealistic beauty standards, the constant pursuit of “cool” culture, and the emotional tug-o-war played with other people, but today I’m going to talk about relationships.

I know. Take relationship advice from the perpetually single girl? How does that even begin to sound like a good idea? Well, friends, it’s a good idea because I’m not going to talk about relationships. I’m going to talk about lacking them.

While being single is basically the bane of every teenager’s existence, the grass over here’s pretty green given all the extra time we have to garden it. Seriously, you’d be surprised at how much free time you have when you don’t have to worry about stuff like that. You can set your life up pretty well by paying more attention to your school work, plus it’s way less stressful. You don’t have to worry about what’s too far and what isn’t. Screw not eating that tuna sandwich because you’re going on a date later, you eat what you want. It’s pretty sweet.

I mean, don’t get me wrong, being single has its downfalls. Do I like seeing my friends with their serious boyfriends, while I’ve never even gone on one date? Heck no. Do I like being almost eighteen and not having ever legitimately danced with someone? Definitely not. It can be super lonely and boring, but when I’m feeling down I just tell myself, “Hey, you know what? Screw that crap. Screw feeling bad about myself just because other people aren’t falling all over me. I’m awesome anyway.”

I wish everyone would just calm down about the whole self-pitying single thing. I mean, come on. We’re only teenagers! We have our whole lives ahead of us to get our hearts broken, so why would you want to rush it?

If I sound corny and optimistic, too bad because it’s the truth. The day we stop worrying about why other people don’t like us and start liking ourselves instead is the day that we’ll find what we want.

~Sara

Weird Coincidences

So, I’m back! The past month has been a whirlwind ball of fun, stress, and beyond awesome people, but I’m back now and in one piece, which is a miracle. I have air conditioning again, which is amazing, and I can sleep in my own bed now, which I’ve dearly missed. I also have fresh stories and experiences to share, so I’m gonna go ahead and do that now.

I think it’s weird how life is always speckled with odd coincidences and correlations. Nice, but weird. This past month at Bridge Builders has been nothing but that. I was forced to be a leader in the same activities I had led during my high school conferences, got the same “Encourage Me” card in the guess-what-reaction-is-on-your-forehead game that I got my senior conference. “Firework” by Katy Perry surfaced again.

That song specifically holds a special meaning for me. During my Junior Conference it was the first and only song my teammates got me to dance to at the end of conference dance. This year, a whole different team got me to dance and sing to it at a karaoke bar. I never, and I mean never dance or sing in front of people, so that’s kind of a big deal. I don’t know, it’s kind of hard for me to describe what it means to me. I guess it’s sort of my life/friendship defining, this-is-your-moment-now-dance-your-way-to-that-next-level anthem. Or it has been anyway. That moment, with everyone singing and dancing along with me, is honestly the best moment of my entire life. And Trip and Kani, I love you two so much for convincing me and for coming up there with me to give me the courage to do it. You two are seriously the best.

I don’t know what all the coincidences mean. Maybe they don’t have any meaning at all. I do know, however, that in the past month I’ve gained a new family. I grew closer to those people in the first week than I am with some people that I’ve known for years. I’ve worked with them, sweated, cried, laughed, had various butts in my face. We clicked immediately and that just helped us become closer. I can say very easily that I love each and every one of them. I will always have their backs and I know they’ll have mine. We’re a family.

~Sara

Respect Yoself!

I wish people would treat each other better. I really do.

I mean, I’m not trying to say I’m completely stain free in the whole Golden Rule category, but I try my best to treat others well. It kills me when I see someone else being mistreated, especially my friends and family. But, hey, the way people look at you, the way they treat you? It all boils down to how you treat yourself.

Surround yourself with people that are going to support and love you. Find people with traits you want to emulate. Don’t hang around people you don’t like or who treat you badly just because you feel like you have to. Being alone and happy is better than being around others and miserable. Trust me, I see it all the time. I’ve been there.

Awhile back, I went through a rough patch with my friends. Every weekend they went out in a group or just hung out at someone’s house. They made plans at lunch around my sister and me, but we were the only two never invited. They still sat by us, but they stopped talking to us. We felt like crap. Why didn’t they want to be around us? Did we do something wrong? Did they even want to be friends anymore?

They were the only friends we had, so we were lonely. Everything they said made me sad and pissed at the same time. They didn’t even seem to realize anything was wrong. So we left.

Rather than stick around and continue being treated like crap, we got some distance and it stayed just the two of us for a while. Things mellowed out and we patched stuff up, but I don’t think things would have been fixed had we just stuck around and let things continue on how they were.

If things aren’t going so good in your neighborhood, find a way to fix it. Don’t just sit there and be miserable, you deserve better than that. Whether it be walking away like my sister and I did or sitting down and hashing things out, you should be able to find a way to make your circumstances better. Respect yourself and be truthful to that. You’ll end up okay.

~Sara