Category Archives: Changing

Tortured Youth

This is part two of a four-part series.

I’ve said before that my high school was not a healthy environment for developing youths. I stand by that statement. It was too competitive, too tough. Too focused on building up your own ego in exchange for breaking down others. Because my mindset and my identity had changed so drastically in 5th and 6th grade, it made it easier for me to fall into this mental and emotional trap. The trap of constantly comparing myself to others. Of always being aware of where I fit in on the social hierarchy. Of feeling worthless if I didn’t meet the impossibly high standards that had been set. I had not necessarily been focused on my grades before that mediocre math exam in 6th grade. I was only doing my best, and my best had been pretty good. Up until that point. But I beat myself up for it. I was embarrassed by it. I tried to forget about it by hiding the results. But it ate at me. It worried away at my confidence until it was wearing thin.

I was close to empty, and it stayed like that for many years. Each new school year gave me a little bit of confidence to start. It was a fresh slate, most of my insecurities had been forgotten. Summer does a fine job of abrading the rough edges. In the fall you start out smooth, but by the time June rolls around, you’re craggily and coarse yet again. Each great English or Social Studies exam result filled my cup a little bit more. But each mediocre to poor Math or Science result eroded any good will. These failures broke me down more than the successes built me up. Because I had been trying so hard to be someone that I wasn’t. I wanted so badly to be good at math and science, because that was what I thought was expected of me. My parents were both scientists, and I had somehow convinced myself that in order to consider myself Asian-American I had to be good at STEM classes. But that wasn’t who I was. It never had been, no matter how much I tried to convince myself otherwise. That was not the skillset I had been blessed with. STEM was neither my calling nor my passion.

But because I had convinced myself that it was a critical part of my ethnic identity, I found it hard to switch focus. I was going to excel at math and science if it was the last thing that I did. But if you’re struggling and aren’t willing to ask for help, then there’s nothing you can really do about it to get better. A seventh grader who doesn’t understand the course material isn’t going to improve without tutoring or hands-on assistance. That was me when it came to math. My math teacher that year was not a good teacher. She didn’t explain things well and she didn’t provide good examples. She read monotonously from the textbook, and she did not translate lessons into terms that a seventh grader would be able to understand. She was quite indifferent. To top it off, she was neither kind nor pleasant so staying after school to get help from her was not an option for me. My confidence continued to sap.

The following year, the teacher was a straight-up bitch, so asking her for help was not an option either. She was perhaps a better teacher than the previous one, but she left me even more disinterested in the subject due to her grating attitude. She was blunt, sarcastic and unsympathetic. If you got an answer wrong she let you know about it. I don’t know if it was intentional or if it was just a byproduct of her personality but it was not a rare occurrence to leave class feeling embarrassed. Perhaps this type of teacher is suitable for a more mature student such as a high school senior or a college student, but she certainly wasn’t helpful for a junior high student. My confidence continued to ebb.

The summer after 8th grade, my mom had enrolled us in summer school for six weeks. One of the two courses I took was a math course. It wasn’t necessarily because I needed it, but she thought it would ease my transition to high school. As fate would have it, the math course was taught by perhaps the only person who could’ve damaged my academic career any further. I say that because all of my high school math teachers were helpful and kind, but because my spirit had already been broken it didn’t matter how good they were at their jobs—they couldn’t help me. I had already become too discouraged. The summer school class was taught by the high school department head. Which sounds like it should be beneficial, but it wasn’t. The teacher was a pompous, self-righteous asshole with no manners and an aggressive personality. It was clear in the way that he taught that he expected you to know more than you did, and he made you feel stupid when you showed that you didn’t. It probably comes with the territory. Math whizzes have a reputation for lacking emotional intelligence. During the school year he only taught the highest level classes: the AP and honors calculus classes. Pre-algebra was beneath him. He made that patently obvious. Why he of all people was allowed to teach summer school is beyond me. 

I came out of the ordeal more demoralized than before. I was defeated. Summer school is supposed to be easy right? More like a tuneup rather than education. But I ended up with mostly high C’s and low B’s. Half a summer of being made to feel stupid ruined me. It didn’t help that there was a kid from my church in my other class. He didn’t live in our town, but our school was prestigious enough that kids from other towns enrolled in the summer program. I don’t know how exactly it came up, but he had made a comment like, “why are you taking math? It’s easy!” And of course that pissed me off. Math at that time had been my biggest insecurity. I wasn’t good at it and I didn’t think I could get good at it. I got so mad that I stole money out of his wallet when he went to the bathroom, and I didn’t even feel bad about it. If you know me, then you know that I’m not a thief. In my thirty years I can count on one hand the amount of times I’ve stolen. But in this instance I had felt justified in doing so.

But I digress. That first C in 6th grade damaged me more than I knew at the time. It was only the start of a downward spiral. But it wasn’t the only thing that I struggled with that year. As I’ve said previously, my parents had pulled me out of sex ed during my puberty years. Being rather conservative, they weren’t happy with what was being taught in public school, but they also didn’t teach me on their own time. During those years I discovered porn, and watched an obscene amount of it, which only served to pervert my view on women. While my father had always been in my life, we did not form a relationship until recently. There had always been a chasm between us that we were unable to cross, so growing up I did not have anyone to look to as a suitable male role model. If I had, maybe things would’ve played out differently, but that’s neither here nor there. I had never been taught properly, so I didn’t have any sort of frame of reference for forming bonds with females. I didn’t know how it worked, but that didn’t stop me from trying. And to nobody’s surprise but my own, my “grand” overtures to woo a girl never succeeded. Oftentimes it was too creepy, sometimes I skipped steps, other times it was too ostentatious. I never could get it right. Even though I’m in a healthy four-year relationship now, I still don’t feel like I “won the girl” so to speak. She approached me, not vice versa!

My 6th grade year had been a year of changes. Changes in my confidence, in my ethnic identity, and in my body physically and emotionally. Deep down, I knew that watching porn was wrong. I couldn’t say why exactly back then. I didn’t have a firm grasp of it. I knew it was a form of lust, but what does lust mean to a twelve-year-old? In my juvenile mind I felt worse about disobeying my parents by staying up late than I did about doing the deed. But that isn’t to say that I didn’t feel unease about it. I did, but I willfully ignored my discomfort to find my satisfaction. My discomfort certainly did not outweigh my desire to find the answers to my questions. After a while I ran out of questions, but continued watching it because it had become ingrained in me as a habit. Every Friday after church I would wait until my family had gone to sleep, then sneak down to the basement with one of the laptops. As I grew older, guilt started weighing more heavily on my heart.

And school did not ease my burden. In fact it did the opposite. As a kid, I was rather two-faced. At home, I was a naughty kid. In public, I was generally well-behaved and shy. I was an all-around terror to my sisters. I’d like to say it was cause I was the only boy and the middle child, but that’s probably understating it. I was an attention-seeking little shit, simple as that. I had started to grow out of it by second or third grade (keyword: started). But just because my lying and hitting had waned to some extent, didn’t mean that my mom had gained any trust in me. Any time there was any screaming or shouting I was the first person that she suspected. I can’t blame her, it was my own doing. I mean I hadn’t shown her any reason to have faith in me. But remember how I said last time that I showed multiple versions of myself to the world? My home life did not mix with my school life. I wouldn’t let it. It was the one thing that I dreaded the most. I was the epitome of fake before I knew what that meant. I may have been a junior terror at home, but I was incapable of mischief at school. I tried to stay out of trouble as much as possible.

But just because I tried to avoid it doesn’t mean that trouble didn’t find me. To this day, I still don’t quite understand how I managed to get into certain situations. There were a number of incidents where due to a misunderstanding or poor communication on my part, blame was pinned on me for things that I hadn’t done. Remember, I was extremely scared of authority figures back then, so what should’ve been a simple conversation was nerve-wracking for me. If I couldn’t address teachers while in a group setting, you can only imagine what I was like one-on-one. It was disastrous to say the least. Being scolded by my mom was one thing, being scolded by a teacher was even worse (especially when you were being falsely accused). It was humiliating. I couldn’t help my nervousness. But that didn’t stop them from jumping to conclusions. My lack of poise was often mistaken for guilt. The reason why I stammered and sounded unsure of myself was because I was scared of the teacher and of getting in trouble, not because I was trying to fabricate a story or because I was scared of getting caught. I didn’t engage in risky behavior, because my fear of getting in trouble far outweighed my fear of getting caught. How can you get caught if you didn’t do anything wrong? So I had no reason to fear it. But that didn’t seem to resonate with some teachers. If they thought I was guilty, then by God I was guilty. It didn’t matter if I was a good student or an obedient and meek kid. 

In preschool, there was a situation in which I unintentionally made my mom cry. But it wasn’t my fault! Not really. The teacher was trying to get us to line up in single file. I was standing there minding my own business, when someone pushed me from behind. After losing my balance, of course my instinct was to reach out in front of me for support. I ended up bumping into a girl and causing her to cry. I really didn’t think I had contacted her that hard. Nevertheless, contact had occurred, albeit accidentally—that much I don’t deny—but that’s what it was. An accident. I had done it as a reactive reflex not as a malicious act. That didn’t seem to matter though. As fate would have it, the kid who had pushed me was a twin, and I was unsurprisingly unable to identify him. These two boys had had a reputation for being naughty, but of course I was to blame because I wasn’t able to point out the culprit. For some reason that’s still incomprehensible to me, it didn’t occur to the teacher that it was borderline insane to a.) ask a toddler to try to distinguish between a set of twins and b.) also ask said toddler to identify who had pushed him from behind. At the tender age of three or four, I had become the victim of a false accusation. It was the first time but it certainly wasn’t the last time.

As a kid, I was afraid to sneeze in public. I was always embarrassed to do so. I don’t know why exactly. One of my favored methods of stifling it was to rub my septum and my upper lip with a loose fist. It usually worked. But one time in third grade it backfired, and I ended up sneezing obscenely loudly. The teacher thought I was being intentionally disruptive so she was about to give me a timeout before she realized what had happened. Third grade had not been a good year for me. I like to refer to it as one of the worst years of my life; it is for sure in the bottom five. In the winter, I had slipped on a giant snowball which had turned into ice overnight and ended up hurting myself severely. There was an incident where the teacher had highlighted a mistake of mine in front of the whole class without naming me specifically. She was upset at the poor spelling the class had exhibited earlier in the week. She was criticizing us for having made careless mistakes. I remember her exact words were “one person spelled volcanos with an ‘e’. The word is vol-cain-nose not vol-cah-noos.” That snide little comment had embarrassed me greatly even though she had not named names. What gets me is that if you look up volcano in the dictionary, the plural form can be with an e or without. Both spellings are correct! But she was the teacher and I was the student, so I was wrong. Of course I was upset and angry that she had brought it up. It wasn’t the first time she had embarrassed me in front of the class. It was only one out of a long string of incidents. Now is probably a good time to mention that her name was Linda (cause of course it was). If I ever met anyone that embodied the connotation of her name it was her.

In sixth grade, my elementary school did this thing where each teacher had a specialization and a homeroom. For English, Math, and Science, the students would rotate to a different classroom. There was a small bobblehead living in the desk that I sat at for math. I remember looking at it. I thought it was interesting and weird. But I didn’t touch it and I didn’t glance at it for more than a few seconds. A few days later, the teacher called me into the hallway and told me that someone had broken the toy, and that the student was extremely upset about it. It became clear to me that she was convinced that I had done it, and nothing I told her would sway her opinion. Like any normal person I still tried to defend myself, even though I knew the endeavor would prove futile. I don’t remember what exactly I said, but I do know that I sounded wishy-washy and I ended up stuttering. I was sweating profusely, my heart was pounding, my ears were getting red, I was on the verge of tears. But it wasn’t because I was guilty and trying to cover it up with a mediocre lie. I was merely unable to complete a coherent thought. I was too nervous; I didn’t know what was going on. But apparently the way that I reacted implied guilt, and the teacher abruptly left the conversation. She was furious, believing that I was actively lying to her. I’ve lied a lot in my lifetime, but I’ve never been good at it. I couldn’t lie to save my life. That’s a simple fact. People know this. Unfortunately to some, facts like that don’t matter. They will believe what they want to believe. It was too much for me to handle. I was unable to focus for the rest of the school day. And I never enjoyed the class after that. The guilt that stemmed from that incident coupled with the C exam began to overwhelm me.

And it was a driving factor in the direction that my life was headed. This was the official end to the first phase of my life. I hadn’t been ready for it, but it had come regardless. It’s quite sudden. One day you’re a child, the next day puberty hits you and you’re different. Your parents, doctors, and teachers try to prepare you for it the best that they can. But for the most part your parents are still learning on the job. My parents didn’t know that pulling me out of sex ed would severely hinder my development. But they had done so because they thought it was the right thing to do. They had their conviction. You can’t blame someone for doing what they believe regardless of if it’s right or wrong. Knowing what I know now, this hadn’t been the right approach, but it happened and no one can change that. I appreciate all experiences—good or bad. Because regardless of what happens, you can learn, grow, and improve. You wouldn’t be who you are now without the adversity that you went through in the past. And that’s the truth. Your experiences mold you. 

For better or for worse. Unfortunately for me, as an adolescent the negative stuck out to me way more than the positive. I had grown pessimistic and cynical without realizing it, and it eventually blossomed into depression and anxiety. It was due to my burden of guilt amongst other things. I had become lost, searching for my identity without a compass, without a guiding star. Without a male role model, and without an understanding of how relationships form or work, I had become a teenager struggling to find his way in the world. Each new rejection or negative experience made me feel worse and worse about myself. My self-confidence had not been very high to begin with, but whatever was left had already eroded away. I didn’t know what or who I was. On top of that, my grip on reality was based more on delusion and fantasy than it was on fact and actuality. For the longest time I had had trouble sleeping. My late night weekends most assuredly exacerbated it. But my way of coping with sleeplessness did not help matters either. I was a lonely kid, I think that much is clear. It didn’t matter how many friends I had or how many people I talked to, the one thing I wanted in my life was a girlfriend. Or at least that’s what I told myself. I realized later in life that all I had really wanted was companionship, whether in the form of a significant other or a close friend, it didn’t really matter. I just needed someone to talk to, who understood me, loved me, and accepted me as I was.

It’s not easy to find that, especially not when you’re wired differently. How am I different? Stay tuned! You’ll find out next time. That being said, I was a highly misunderstood and tortured youth. I wanted to be bold but I didn’t have the courage for it. I did not overcome my shyness until I reached my early-mid 20s. Who I wanted to be was nowhere close to who I was. And the path towards it was cryptic and full of obstacles. The next steps were not readily apparent to me. I didn’t know how to get there, but I wanted to be there more than anything. But the divide proved to be too wide to cross. Not with the set of tools, mindset/mentality, motivations that I had at the time. I couldn’t deal with it. I didn’t know how. 

So I made up stories in my head. I lived vicariously through myself. Real-life Justin wanted to be bold but didn’t know how. But have no fear! Alternate reality Justin had no such issues! In times when I had trouble sleeping I dreamed up scenarios between me and my crushes. Scenarios where I went after the girl. Scenarios where I was popular. Where I knew what I wanted. Where I was accepted. Where I was who I wanted to be. The fantasies continued on from the previous night in the form of a long-winded story. For a few years this was where I did my greatest creative work! But none of that was real, and all of it was damaging. Your mind does strange things when you sleep. Sometimes stray thoughts linger. They circulate as you rest. They may slip into your dreams, and stay with you when you awaken. It was unhealthy obsessive thinking but I didn’t know it. I didn’t know better. I didn’t know that these role-playing narratives impaired my still-developing psyche. Reality and fantasy had interwoven and the thin line had become thinner.

I had unknowingly allowed delusional thought to creep in. And unfortunately it guided me for a time, like it was my instinct. But it wasn’t. I had unintentionally tricked myself into believing falsities. And occasionally I went through with asking girls out that I had never spoken to or interacted with. I had absolutely no business being where I was. Of course I was rejected or laughed at—that had always been the only reasonable outcome. But in my head I really thought that I had had a chance! Crazy right?! But like I said, I didn’t know how it worked. I was in a bad mental headspace for years, so it was easy for the lines between dream and reality to blur. Now it would be easy to blame all of my romantic troubles and difficulties on my delusions but that’s a bit of a copout. Real people’s lives were affected. There were real-life consequences. Potentially promising friendships were ruined. So to blame it on anything but myself is being unfair to everyone else who was involved. Despite what was going on in my head, I had still made someone else feel uncomfortable. So I have to take responsibility for it. I have to own up to my mistakes. In the end, regardless of your intentions, delusions, or misconceptions you are responsible for what you say and what you do. 

I know that now. But I can’t say I knew it then. I didn’t value myself very highly back then, but I valued other people even less. Me, wrong? I couldn’t be wrong! I couldn’t possibly be at fault! Instead of holding myself accountable, instead of admitting that I had fucked up, instead of recognizing my mistakes and moving on, I had maintained a woe-is-me attitude. I convinced myself that people were out to get me, that they hated me, that they wanted to see me fail. I didn’t acknowledge that there were things I could’ve done better. I didn’t think I could do better. I thought I was destined to be mediocre my whole life. I thought I was destined for failure. I didn’t think I could amount to anything meaningful or useful. But that was only because my way of thinking then did not align with who I was and who I wanted to become. Remember how I said that I have always been different? Well guess who was the last person to realize this? This guy! Me! 

Sure, in fifth grade I had started going to a “better” school. I started to have Asian friends that weren’t from church. I started to think more like a stereotypical Asian-American. I was only trying to fit in. But I was already different. I always had been. I was never meant to fit into a stereotype. I was selling myself short. I wasn’t the gold standard of Asian-Americanness. I wasn’t the shining church example. I was just me. The same me who hadn’t been afraid to express himself the way that he knew how in fourth grade. But I had lost sight of that during puberty. It had never occurred to me how different I was. It had never registered that I didn’t need to try to be unique, I already was unique. My thought process was already distinctively mine. I was an out-of-the-box thinker even as a young kid. When I was young, I wasn’t one to conform. I did what I wanted. But as I grew older, and as I grew more eccentric I started walking a tightrope. I wanted to be different, I felt a need to be different.

And this became a driving force in my life. It was my main motivation. But as adults we know better right? If your drive stems from a desire to be unique it will never work out. You need something more. You need something greater than that. Being different just for the sake of being different is meaningless. Your idiosyncrasies should serve a purpose. Sometimes they don’t, and that’s quite alright. It’s a part of you that likely isn’t going to change. But it’s you. That’s the important thing. Be genuine. Don’t put on a facade. Don’t be two-faced. Don’t pretend. Be you, and be proud of you. Be proud of who you are. Be proud of where you came from. Be proud of where you’re going. You can only ever be yourself. Trying to be someone else only leads to pain. I wish I had discovered this earlier on. If I had, I don’t think I would’ve been as lost as I was in my teens and mid-20s. I didn’t understand the purpose for my life, the meaning behind it, what I was put on this planet to do. 

I just don’t think I had the mental capacity to come to that conclusion at the time. I was too trapped in my own head to think clearly. I was too mired in my own insecurities to show proper judgment and discernment. My delusions had grown and multiplied. I didn’t have the ambition or the tenacity to excel at what I did. I had given up on academics somewhat. I had lost hope and had never really set any attainable goals for myself. I didn’t really know what I wanted. For a while I was thinking about becoming a musician. After I had convinced myself that the world was going to end soon, I had settled upon a military career. It was to be something of a place holder until I figured it out. Eventually I was persuaded to go the standard college route. But still it wasn’t what I wanted. I only went through with it so as not to rock the boat. Applying to business programs was just a way for me to manage expectations. I didn’t do it because I wanted to. I did it because I felt like I was supposed to. By my junior year of high school, I had distanced myself somewhat from the elite academic scholars. I didn’t like the way that hanging out with them made me feel. I just didn’t think that I could compete with them, nor did I want to. I really didn’t have that much in common with them aside from my skin tone when it came down to it. So I found acceptance with two other groups: the loners and the stoners.

I did not partake at the time. My religious “morals” prevented me from doing so. But maybe I should’ve. Maybe I would’ve been able to build up some semblance of self-confidence if I had. Maybe I would’ve been better able to understand myself. Maybe full-on depression wouldn’t have onset by sophomore year. Another one of life’s mysteries. Marijuana is what you make of it. It can be a crutch if you choose to use it as such. Or it can be a source of inspiration. It can make you anxious or it can calm your nerves. It depends greatly on your headspace and your reason for using it. Like everything in life, a balance is required. But I’m not here to talk about that. That’s a discussion for a different day. What happened happened, and marijuana hadn’t played a role in it. The stoners did help me feel a bit better about myself. There were less expectations, less pressure. They were more laidback. Not nearly as ambitious. But yet, I still didn’t feel like I belonged. 

I was still on the outside looking in. I wouldn’t say it was solely because I didn’t smoke. There were likely other reasons for it. Remember how I had shelled up and put up walls? Those didn’t come down around those kids either. I was less wary but still on my guard. I still distanced myself. I tried not to get too close. I was afraid of getting hurt. Being anti-social was more comfortable to me. So I didn’t try that hard to make friends. I was friendly and cordial to those I knew, but I rarely let it get more complex than that. I thought I was okay with that but I really wasn’t. Inner turmoil ate at me. But I told myself I was fine. I let the darkness envelop me because I didn’t know how to cope with it. I let depression engulf me. Resigning myself to the fact that it was going to plague me for years to come. I allowed it to fester because I didn’t know how to combat it. I let myself get too high and I let myself get too low. I rode the emotional rollercoaster wherever it took me. I wasn’t in control of my emotions. Instead I let my emotions dictate the narrative. I didn’t live my life. I let my life live me. 

And my depression worsened. One year turned into two. Two years became five. Five became eleven. Of course it wasn’t constant. I likely would’ve died if that had happened. But it would be a couple months here of feeling okay, followed by a couple months there of feeling in the dumps. It got old pretty quick. But I dealt with it adequately enough. I did it the best way I knew how, which was to hide all my trauma in a box that I hid in the attic of my brain (check out Un-Dealt with, Ignored, Sitting in a Box for more). That’s right. I didn’t deal with things head-on. I ran from them. I ran from any and all adversity. That was a defining characteristic of the pre-therapy version of myself. Case in point: I had asked a girl to prom over AIM (another person that I barely knew). When confronted by a friend about it—he was good friends with her—I tried to pass it off as a hypothetical. I told him that I had asked her how she would react if I asked her. We all knew that there wasn’t anything hypothetical about it. I had asked her and I had made things awkward as a result. But I didn’t deal with rejection well, so I tried to alter the narrative to suit my purposes. But just because you force yourself to remember an event one way doesn’t mean that that is how it happened. Reality is reality, and no amount of misremembering, manipulation, or gaslighting can change that. 

But like I’ve said a few times already, I was too depressed to think about other people or consequences. And instead of rolling with the punches and moving on, I dwelled on things. I didn’t let things go. I couldn’t. Sometimes after I was rejected by a girl, I geared myself up to be rejected by her again! I couldn’t take no for an answer, even though no was the only answer I ever received. Lack of sex education and lack of social etiquette was to blame. Yes, learning to become an adult is truly difficult. The transitional teenage years might just be the worst years of your life. It’s hard, but it’s not that hard. It just takes the tiniest amount of common sense. Sense that I didn’t possess. If she doesn’t like you, that’s not going to change unless you change yourself or circumstances change. She’s not going to come around in a week and just be like, “oh never mind. I do like you actually.” Things don’t happen that way. Maybe they do in stories. But that’s just it. Those are stories. They may be inspired by real life, but they aren’t real life. 

That’s something we all have to remember. If you spend too much time trapped in your own head, your perception of reality will likely obfuscate. You start lying to yourself, you start deluding yourself, you start to believe that anything is possible. Yes, you can be who you want to be. Yes, you can do what you want to do. If you put your mind to it, you can achieve anything you want. But that comes with certain caveats. You need to have the skills and the tools for it for one. Without the proper equipment you will be just another poor, mediocre soul. You know that saying about trying to force a round peg into a square hole? Don’t do that. Another thing you don’t want to do is ignore reality. You can’t just say, “fuck it,” and go for things that don’t make sense. Some things were never meant to be. They were never going to work out. It’s obvious to see. You just have to review the facts from a more objective perspective. If you’ve never spoken to someone before, chances are they weren’t thinking about you, let alone wanting you. They don’t even know who you are! If you’ve never played an instrument before, the chances of you becoming a musician are slim to none unless you really work at it. You can’t just think scenarios into reality. It doesn’t work that way. Things don’t just fall into place without the requisite effort.

It took me a long time to understand that. But joining up with the stoners was a step in the right direction. That was when I realized that STEM was not for me. I realized that I was projecting. Pretending that I was good at something that I was always going to struggle with. Trying to be something that I wasn’t, just to fit in. It was the first step on my path towards mental health. Letting go of the main thing that held me back. Unfortunately the second, third, and subsequent steps did not occur until years later. I did learn and grow from my mistakes but progress was slow. Until I actually got my mental health under control, I was still grasping at straws into my mid-20s. I was still ignorantly wallowing in my delusions. Especially when it came to my love life. I had stopped dreaming up fantasy scenarios by then but that didn’t mean that I was more realistic about my expectations. I still expected the unexpected. And that was to my detriment.

Line of Delineation

I would like to start this post with a disclaimer. If you get to the end of this and feel that it’s incomplete, that’s because it is. I don’t quite know how to describe it, but I know a post is done when it’s done. There’s no set word count or guideline that I follow. But in everything that I post, I stop writing when I feel a sense of completeness. I guess the perfectionist in me has an inherent feeling for when that is. I may meander in my posts, but they generally come full circle, connecting the beginning with the end. 

However, that won’t be the case here. What started out as a single premise has quickly ballooned into something that will not fit in one post. The more I write, the more I understand that sometimes your writing has a mind of its own. This monster here is no different. This post will be the first part of three or four. I’m not quite sure yet how many times I will split this. I’ve been trying to lower my word count (not trying very hard evidently), but it hasn’t really been working. But since I am preemptively splitting it, hopefully I won’t make your eyes bleed too much. That being said, let’s begin.

I’ve always been different. Always thought differently, always acted differently. As a kid it came to me naturally. Simply put, I just wasn’t wired the same. I zigged when others zagged. In my teenage years it became somewhat intentional and exaggerated. I wanted to be known. I wanted to be unique. I wanted to be remembered. One of my biggest fears was being forgotten. So I did whatever I could to stand out. I wanted so much to make a name for myself. But I didn’t need to try so hard. I didn’t need to stress as much as I did. When you do great things, your actions speak for themselves. It’s not necessary to embarrass yourself for the sake of name recognition. Not all press is good press despite what they say. Fame and popularity are not even things that you can catalyze or manifest (frankly they’re overrated anyway). They don’t come as a result of your actions or your behavior. They are rather, people’s reactions to things you have done or created. Excel at what you do and be confident in who you are, and all things will fall in place. 

Trying too hard is honestly an easy mistake to make. As we grow up we slowly discover who we are. We find what we’re capable of, we learn about ourselves, and we discover what motivates us. But oftentimes in doing so, we don’t remain true to ourselves. We try to be someone that we’re not. We attempt to live lives that aren’t the ones that are meant for us. We don’t make the best use of our gifts, and we try to pursue paths that we aren’t optimized for. It comes with the territory. Growing up and finding who you are also includes discovering who you are not. Finding who you are involves trial and error. We don’t start pursuing greatness from Day 1. We’re not capable of it. That’s why we go to school for 13+ years. Our rudimentary tools need to be developed and honed. They tell us from the start to dream big. The motivational posters and banners hanging up in classrooms may be corny, but they generally hold some semblance of real truth. Dream big. Always. But make sure that it’s your dream that you’re pursuing and not someone else’s. Life is more satisfying that way. 

I can attest to that. We can all agree on that can’t we? If you’ve been reading along with me, you know by now that I like to distinguish between pre-therapy Justin and post-therapy Justin. What can I say? It was a definite turning point in my life. We are ever-changing, so each year we show a different version of ourselves to the world. But I like to break up my life so far into three phases. No it’s not childhood, pre-teen/adolescence, and adulthood. That seems like a reasonable line of delineation, but it doesn’t quite work for me. The main crossroads in my life didn’t line up that way. For me it’s childhood, pre-therapy (disheartened youth), and post-therapy (mended human). We all know that I am quite open about my struggles with mental health. After all, that’s been my thing ever since I started posting more regularly on this blog. It’s been the drum that I’ve been beating and will continue to beat. I do not hesitate to talk about it. It may be taboo for others but it’s not for me. It’s a necessary discussion and relevant to us all. 

I don’t find myself meeting new people that often—I don’t go out much after all. And although I don’t generally take initiative in starting conversations, I am open to conversing with people I don’t know. I don’t have a problem talking. I can carry a conversation just fine; I’m just not much of a conversation starter. When I do find myself partaking, the conversation generally flows in much the same direction. They ask me what I do for work—no surprise there. I rehash recent history: this is what I used to do, but I quit in January, and now I spend my time writing. The conversation usually continues in much the same way. I don’t go out of my way to talk about myself (I’m not that conceited), but if someone is asking me questions about myself, you’d best believe I’ll answer them all as thoroughly as possible. That being said, I routinely find myself being asked something along the lines of, “what spurred you to quit your job and start writing?” I’m glad you asked! The short answer is that I went through dark times, I sought out help, and I worked on my mental health. We’ll get to the long answer later on.

Mental health might seem like a heavy subject to discuss during a first-time conversation, and I have to admit that I agree with you! But if we sidestep the discussion in order to stay within our comfort zone, won’t it become easier to just sidestep it every time? If we don’t talk about it when it comes up naturally, then when will we ever talk about it? There won’t be a better time!

Willfully ignoring a prime opportunity like that wouldn’t sit right with me. Are we ready to jilt ourselves out of a genuine conversation with life-changing potential? I don’t know about you, but that’s not a risk that I’m willing to take. I don’t want that blood on my hands. There’s already enough artificiality in this world as is, we don’t need to doctor our conversations. Of course there are some things that should be kept to yourself when meeting new acquaintances, but in my opinion this is not one of them. If profound subject matter makes you uncomfortable, then great! It means that it’s working. It made you think. It was thought-provoking. I’d rather have that than go through the motions with small-talk. Get to know people truly. You’ll be better for it.

As much as we like to think that we’re empathetic and observant, we simply do not know everything that others are going through. That’s part of being human. And although we regularly engage in nuanced communication such as body language, tone of voice, and facial expression/non-verbal cues, nothing beats communicating through conversing. We can only imply so much, we can only hint at so much. Some people are better at reading non-verbal language than others. Some people are utterly clueless. That’s just how it is. The best way to understand another person has been and always will be talking to them. Listening to them. Discussing consequential subject matter. Having a back and forth. The preeminent method of characterizing how you’re feeling is verbalizing it. Bring your thoughts to life in the form of word or action. I know us males don’t like to talk about our feelings. It’s seen as weak, feminine, vulnerable. But if we don’t communicate, then how will we foster healthy relationships with other people? So let’s start a conversation. Let’s talk. Let’s facilitate a safe space. Let’s come to an understanding. Let’s discover what it means to be mentally healthy. I can and will talk to anybody and everybody about mental health. I think it’s that important. It bears thinking about. Think deeply and profoundly. Reflect on your life. Be proactive in addressing your issues. Discover who you are through active contemplation.

A fruitful life calls for introspection, so be sure to make time for it. If you don’t understand yourself how can you expect others to understand you? Be one with yourself. Ensure that your mind, body, and soul are in sync. You need to discover who you are. It’s imperative. As I said, discovering who you are includes discovering who you are not. This encompasses but is not limited to the following: finding your strengths and weaknesses; discovering your interests, passions, likes/dislikes; figuring out how you think; making honest assessments about your good or bad habits; recognizing areas that need improvement. 

Of course, each person’s mind works differently, so I can only speak to what goes on in mine. That being said, for a long time, I had been conditioned towards passivity. It was in my nature. As you know, I was an extremely shy kid, which resulted in lack of confidence and eventual anxiety. I never really told anyone what I liked or what I wanted for fear of reprisal or rejection. I never really pursued what I wanted to pursue for fear of tipping the boat. From a young age, I was afraid to tell even my parents how I truly felt about certain things. I was afraid of liking things too much. Whether it was due to fear of it being taken away or being told that I couldn’t like it or have it, I don’t really know. I remember when I was 6 or 7 my mom had bought me a beautiful Philadelphia Eagles winter jacket. It was puffy, reversible, and oh so warm. I loved it. But I rarely wore it. I spent more time looking at it in my closet than I spent wearing it, but it was still my favorite thing that I owned up til that point. I never told my mom how I truly felt about it. I was too afraid. Of what you ask? I’m not even sure if I knew back then, I certainly don’t know now. Regardless, even as a young tyke, I just didn’t think I was allowed to have nice things. I don’t know where this misconception stemmed from, but it stuck with me far into my adult years. Sometimes it was overt, other times it remained suppressed.

Of course it became a hindrance for me as the years went by. It played a huge impact on my life, but at the time I was incapable of identifying it let alone quantifying its effect. I never would’ve known it. Reflection and introspection weren’t really a part of my vocabulary back then. I’ll admit, I was delusional in some things, and misguided in others. I just didn’t know myself all that well. My self-awareness was nearly non-existent. Which came in conflict with my self-image in an odd sort of way. I worried so much about my self-image when I was younger, but I likely did more harm to it than good. I certainly didn’t help it with some of my outlandish behavior as a teenager. In trying so hard to stand out, to be unique, to be memorable, I only brought attention to the less than desirable aspects of my persona. But I didn’t know that. I did what I wanted to do, I said what I wanted to say in the moment, without a second thought. I didn’t care about others. I didn’t even care about myself. But even so, I was still too self-absorbed. Focusing on what I was doing at the moment rather than looking ahead to my future; or looking within at who I was; or improving my image and reputation to who I wanted to be. 

So where would I be without introspection? Where would I be without therapy? That’s where we see the three phases of my life come into play. I had a fairly decent childhood. Like most, I had good times and I had bad. I went on playdates with friends, I hung out with kids at recess, I talked to kids at church. I was just a regular kid for all intents and purposes. But even so, I still spent a lot of my time alone. Being the only boy and the middle child will do that. I don’t know if I would call it a double triple life, but there were three versions of myself that I showed the world. There was who I was when I was at church, there was who I was with friends at school, and there was who I was when addressing adults and authority figures. There was also who I was at home, which was also somewhat different.

I was most comfortable at church. I was a goody-two-shoes. I always tried my best in Sunday School and during the youth programs. I read the Bible regularly and I was a pretty consistent participant. Oddly enough, the adults that helped out with these programs didn’t scare me all that much. If there were ever a shell-less version of me in elementary school this was it. But at the same time, this version of me may not have been the real me. Like many other church kids, I put up a facade. I was a holier than thou type so my church image was sacrosanct. It was cleaned up and immaculate. I cared a whole lot about my reputation before the word even became part of my vocabulary. Of course there were certain kids that I did “rebel stuff” with, like swearing or gossiping, but who hasn’t done that? I did that stuff in secret, only my compatriots knew about it. I didn’t do it in a way that allowed for the general public to see. I had always selfishly seen myself as the kid that parents brought up as an example to follow.

Who I was at school with classmates was quite similar but without the religious overtones. This was another relatively opened up version of me. I didn’t really try to hide who I was. I didn’t talk about my faith at school because I didn’t know how and because it never came up, so that aspect of my life remained separate. Due to the lack of a facade, this was likely the most genuine version of me. I didn’t try to clean up my image. I was who I was, and I had no issues with it. That is until 4th grade. That year I had started needing glasses. At the time, wearing glasses in public felt like a death sentence to me. I was embarrassed and scared. I decided I would rather squint and have trouble reading than wear them. Of course, that only made my vision worse, but the thought had never crossed my mind. I didn’t know it at the time, but that year was the start of a major downturn in my life. That was the first critical event that caused my self-confidence to steadily wane. And in my pre-therapy years it never fully recovered.

The face I showed adults and authority figures like teachers, store workers, or restaurant staff was completely closed and guarded. I was afraid. I couldn’t talk to them and I wouldn’t. I couldn’t even look them in the eye. I didn’t participate in school. I didn’t raise my hand. I didn’t ask questions. I didn’t ask for help. At times it felt like it was physically impossible. There was too much pressure. I did my best to follow along with the lessons, but I was too shy to speak up. Talking to someone who was more than a few years older than me was too daunting a task. I couldn’t even order a cheeseburger at McDonald’s. It gave me too much anxiety. Getting up even the slightest sliver of courage to say a simple sentence was too demanding. My pint-sized brain couldn’t handle it. I didn’t like being this way, but I couldn’t exactly help it. Certain triggers shut off my communication skills. Unfortunately, over time it just got worse. Being a recluse went from being my alternate mode to my default mode.

As my confidence ebbed, I found it easier and easier to clam up. To build up walls. Puberty pushed me in that direction. Throughout my elementary school years there were a number of traumatic experiences that stuck with me and replayed in my head over and over. I won’t rehash all of them here. There are way too many for me to describe in detail (not all at once anyway). I never could get over them. Not for the next 10-15 years. I struggled immensely with letting things go. There were two monumental events in 6th grade that catalyzed the direction that my life was headed. Although not the most damaging experiences ever, they were the precursor to something dark. The first incident was maybe not a huge deal when it came down to it, but in the moment it was devastating. 

I don’t remember when exactly it had happened, it may have been in the spring. I had gotten a 75 on one of my math tests (the first of many sadly), mostly due to careless mistakes. And of course I freaked out. That had never happened to me before. I was a good student, a kid who had always thought that he was on the right track. Who took school somewhat seriously and enjoyed it. This result was the first time in my life I had started to doubt my abilities. Before this exam I had total faith in myself. I had never before felt any insecurity about my academic capability. Unfortunately this was only the start of a troubling trend. 

In 5th grade we had transferred schools within the district. From 2nd grade to midway through 5th I had attended what my siblings and I refer to as a “hippie” school. We called our teachers by their first names, our assignments weren’t graded (I’m not sure if they were even pass/fail), and we took sloyd instead of art class. Instead of learning drawing, painting, and sculpture we basically had a woodworking class. I remember making a rainstick, a güiro, and a mbira amongst other things. My parents hated it. They didn’t think that alternative education would prepare us well for junior high let alone high school. But we were new to the town, and the wait list for the “better” (read that as more traditional) schools was long. Victoria and I had been put on the wait list as soon as we had arrived in town. As you can see, it had taken three and a half years to get off of the wait list. 

Back then, there weren’t as many east Asians in our town. They didn’t start moving in en masse until I had gotten to 8th or 9th grade. All of my friends at my first school were white. At my second school, I was one of four Asians in my class, which unsurprisingly changed my school dynamic. My priorities shifted, as did my identity. This was when I first started coming to grips with my Asian-American heritage. Sure, the majority of people at my church were Asian, but that was different. I didn’t see those kids everyday, I only saw them on Fridays and Sundays. So for me to finally have classmates that looked like me, that was life-changing. But regrettably it was beneficial for me in some ways, but detrimental in many others. 

I became more focused on doing things that fit into Asian stereotypes. As a preteen I thought that it was the proper way to show pride in my culture. I didn’t know how to identify as Asian-American without being a cliche. Of course some traditions were rooted in my cultural upbringing—it’s hard for the offspring of immigrants to be completely whitewashed unless it was done so intentionally. It does happens, but it didn’t happen to me. My parents had tried their best to instill Chinese culture into our upbringing. We went to Chinese school, we took piano lessons, they preferred to speak to us in Cantonese and Mandarin, and we had homework to do outside of school (both Kumon and extracurricular workbooks from Costco). The things that they say about “tiger parenting” are true for the most part. All traditional Chinese parents use this technique to some extent. It’s just a matter of how much emphasis and how strict. That being said, I rejected this approach somewhat. It just didn’t work on me all that effectively. In any event, I grew up rather whitewashed—if I were to put a percentage on it I would put it at 70-75%. So it wasn’t for lack of effort on my parents’ part. That falls on me, not them.

In Cantonese they have a term for it: jook sing. It refers to a Chinese person who was born in a Western environment who identifies more with Western culture than they do Chinese culture. It is a somewhat derogatory term that our parents’ generation uses to refer to us. The opposite of this would be FOB (fresh off the boat). Ideally we want to be somewhere in the middle. Acknowledging your heritage from both angles. But while it may be easy to bond over things such as the cuisine, filial piety, and academic excellence, it doesn’t quite hold the same meaning if you’re unfamiliar with the language. And unfortunately Chinese is a difficult language to learn. It’s not intuitive. There are thousands of characters, and five or six different intonations. It doesn’t have a traditional alphabet. It’s easy to fall behind in class. Especially if you’re a Cantonese kid trying to learn Mandarin for the first time. I dreaded Chinese School. I had never really been interested in it to begin with, because I had been forced into it. But it was also easy to get discouraged by its difficulty.

Unlike English there are multiple aspects of the language that you need to learn. It’s possible to excel at one aspect but be mediocre in another. In English we have verbal and written forms. If you know how to speak English then you’ll have no problem understanding it and vice versa. If you know how to read it, then you’ll also have a basic understanding of writing it at a minimum. In Chinese it’s not the same thing. All four things are separate. Generally when speaking to your elders they’ll ask you if you know Chinese. And depending on what you know, you’ll tell them you can read, write, speak, and/or understand Chinese. I will usually say that I can understand a bit, but I can’t speak it. My vocabulary is poor and my accent is off. Due to the nature of the language, it’s imperative to be able to nail down the correct intonation, otherwise you risk saying the wrong thing and/or embarrassing yourself. My grasp of the written form is even more atrocious. The characters are hard to remember, and even if you do recognize a character it doesn’t mean you know what sound it makes. Not unless the pinyin or jyutpin is written above the character. Pinyin and jyutpin are romanizations of the sounds that each character makes. But just because you know what the character sounds like doesn’t mean that you know what it means necessarily. Are you thoroughly lost yet? So am I! So do you see why I had so little interest in learning Chinese? It was difficult, so I rejected it. And instead, embraced what I knew. I knew how to act white. It was easy for me because all of my friends were white. Up until 6th grade, I hadn’t necessarily adhered to traditional Chinese principles. But then things changed, simply because I had made some Asian friends.

I suppressed who I was on a personal level in exchange for emphasizing who I was on a socioeconomic level. Which in theory may sound great. Especially for Asian-Americans. As a culture we don’t like to rock the boat. We’d rather conform than show individuality. It’s safer that way. If you don’t draw attention to yourself there’s less of a chance for disappointment or failure. And boy, let me tell you, failure is the last word that Asian immigrant parents want to hear or say. If you fail, you bring dishonor to your people, to your family, and to yourself. I didn’t necessarily feel that much pressure from my parents. They were much less strict than many others. You know the mom from Turning Red? That wasn’t my parents, but I knew parents that were like that. It has a transcendent effect on their kids, and in turn on us—their classmates. I certainly felt a whole lot of pressure from church aunties, my parent’s friends, and most of all my peers. It’s draining. Mentally, emotionally, and spiritually. 

The Call of the Wild

I hear them calling out to me
I see them waving me on
Beckoning me, summoning me towards
It’s the call of the wild
It’s pulling me forward

I hear them, I see them
But I hesitate to answer the call
I’ve been tainted with the mark
The mark of the wild, the mark of the feral
Am I man or am I animal?

I hear them calling out to me
Drawing me close
They’re summoning me as if I’m one of their own
Part of the den, part of the brood
“One of us, one of us,” they chant
Am I animal or am I man?

It’s the call of the wild
On my own, in a world of my own creation
I am hermit in my natural habitat
On my own, I’ve been so alone
On my own, on my own
Am I man or am I animal? 

“One of us, one of us,” they chant
“No,” I yell back. “No. Not one of you. I’m my own.”
I’m my own, but oh so alone
I hear them calling out to me
I see them waving me on
Beckoning me, summoning me towards
It’s the call of the wild
Am I animal or am I man?

A hermit in his natural habitat
On my own and oh so alone
“One of us, one of us,” they chant
“Come to us, come to us,” they summon
I’m my own, I’m my own
I’m my own but oh so alone

“One of us, one of us,” they chant
It’s the mark of the wild, the mark of the feral
Human no longer
Animal, beast, monster
I’ve become one of them
I’m right where I belong

YasNo Queen

So I’m sure you’ve noticed by now that my posts have been getting progressively longer. Don’t think that I haven’t noticed that as well. I have. But I assure you that it is entirely unintentional. I apologize. I’m not setting out to write 5000+ word essays, it just happens; when it reaches that length, I know that my post has veered off in ways that I hadn’t intended it to. But I usually let it, because there were important things that needed to be said. A post isn’t done until it’s done. Unfortunately, I am a wordy person. That’s unlikely to change. I hope you don’t mind. That being said, I’ll try to keep this post shorter, but I make no promises.

So my dad emailed me the other week. My mom had told him the news. I didn’t open it right away because I didn’t know how it would go. As I’ve said, I know my dad better now, but I still don’t feel like I really know him. Not wholly at least. He’s still an enigma in a number of ways. It’s hard for me to read him. When I have trouble reading someone’s reaction, I typically get somewhat nervous. I hold off on reading the email or text. I start overthinking. I work up a little bit of anxiety. My brain sort of gets locked up. I don’t do well in these types of situations in short. I’m not entirely sure what the root cause of it is. Maybe I try to overhype something or I overemphasize its importance or I psyche myself out. Whatever the case may be, this has been the way I respond to certain situations for a while now. It’s not a good habit to keep of course. But I’ve gotten noticeably better about it over the years. It comes with maturity.

In the past I would get sweaty palms and/or my heart would start beating incredibly fast. I’m naturally a sweaty person so I’m already prone to breaking out in excessive moisture as it is, but situations like this only exacerbated it. Whatever the case, that was my usual bodily response to situations that I couldn’t read. But the nervousness in my brain didn’t necessarily align with that. The thing is, I felt like my body was more nervous than my brain was. I didn’t think nervously, I only acted nervously. I’m sure there’s a link between my physical response and my mental response, but I don’t know the science behind it. So I’m not going to try to explain it. This type of reaction usually manifested itself in two scenarios: one where I was trying to talk to a girl, and one where I was trying to do a class presentation. So you may be wondering how my dad fits into either situation, I’ll get to that, just be patient. 

I was notoriously (and probably still am) bad at reading signs of interest. I never knew when people were flirting with me. It did seem to happen to me more often than I realized (in college and afterwards), so take that for what it’s worth. I never had a problem figuring out when someone was showing interest in a friend, but when it came to myself I was virtually blind. I either didn’t see what was happening at all (I would be told about it later by a friend who had observed the situation) or I belatedly realized what was happening on my own. Outwardly I used to laugh about it, joking that I had “cockblocked myself yet again,” but inwardly I used to lament, “missing another prime opportunity.” I thought about these situations quite often. After the fact, I was always able to think of better things I could’ve said or done. But never in the moment. I always told myself, “next time you’ll do better,” but that never ended up happening. When next time came along, I ended up with the same results. That’s neither here nor there though. These things happened for a reason. They weren’t meant to be. Simple as that. So I don’t regret it too much anymore. If I had developed better skills, “had better game” as it were, would better results have come of these situations? It’s possible; one can wonder.

We’ve been over this quite often, but I’ll say it again in case it hasn’t sunk in: I didn’t have much self-confidence growing up. It was a direct result of my shyness and anxiety amongst other things. My excessive shyness eventually resulted in me having inadequate people skills. It’s an interesting chicken & egg discussion whether my lack of confidence led to poor people skills or vice versa. Either way my deficiencies in both areas were entirely detrimental to my development as an adolescent. I didn’t grow into a regular boy with regular wants and needs. I grew into a creep. That’s right, you’re seeing it in print here, for the first time. I was a creep. I’ll admit that freely. While I don’t regret the end result of the aforementioned random situations, I do regret the times when I jumped into or created messy situations of my own free will. There were many in high school, and some in college (& beyond). If I had been able to read the signs better would I have been less desperate as an adolescent? Would I have been able to forestall messy situations from worsening or avoid them completely in the first place? Would I have realized that messaging someone out of the blue is creepy? I’m not sure, but I’d like to think so. If I had known who was interested beforehand I’d like to think that I wouldn’t have taken (as many) random shots in the dark.

And boy were there a lot of random shots. I don’t listen to the radio anymore, but I remember The Breakfast Club used to have a segment during their show called Shoot Your Shot. Usually they were cutesy little love stories with a pleasant, feel-good ending. But every so often there were shots from way out in left field that were quite cringey. Grown ass men calling up strangers on the radio! Weird men telling women that they liked them when the fact of the matter was they had never had a real conversation with them. If you get a “hello, who’s this?” you know you’ve most likely screwed up. You either read the situation incorrectly, or you doggedly pursued someone that was out of your league. Most people aren’t thinking about you as often as you think they are. Why would someone use their brain space to think about a random stranger on the street? That doesn’t normally happen. I know all of this now, but did I know it then? Was I really so different from those long shots? In some instances, I might’ve been even worse. I never understood why things never worked out—let’s be honest, it was mostly my fault—but I wasn’t exactly the brightest bulb. At least not when it came to love, relationships, and the like. I knew jack shit about it. But it seems like sometimes I liked to pretend that I knew. Why else would I pull up from full court and expect a basket? I was a love dope—addicted to the idea of it, but also completely uneducated in every aspect. I was a bozo.

When I messaged a girl on Facebook or something I would get so nervous that I would flip my phone over, silence it, and put it somewhere that was out of reach. Back in the AIM days, I’d do something similar. I would shoot a message, then nervously chat with someone else, while I anxiously awaited a reply. I tensed up, my anxiety spiked. My lack of self-confidence on top of that only proved to do more harm than good. But the thing is I was expecting the unexpected. Which is all fine & good, provided that what you expect is logical and realistic. That wasn’t me. My vision was corrupted by delusion. I was messaging people that I had no business messaging in the first place! That should’ve been a red flag for me. That should’ve been the demarcation. Except red flags didn’t really have a place in my worldview back then. They didn’t exist. The word “boundary” didn’t hold any meaning for me at that time. I crossed lines that shouldn’t have been crossed. But I was so self-absorbed that I didn’t even see them, no matter how obvious they were.

I never asked myself the following question sequence, and I really should have. Have I talked to this person in real life? No? Don’t message her. Yes, but it wasn’t an in-depth conversation? Don’t message her. Yes, but it was entirely school related? Don’t message her. Are you friends? No? Are you even acquaintances? Barely? Don’t message her. But I didn’t know better. My people skills were incredibly stunted back then. It wasn’t entirely my fault. In a way, I wasn’t raised right. Yes, I hold myself responsible for my actions. After all, nobody told me to do the things that I did; I made those choices on my own. But I wasn’t taught certain things as a child—nobody had told me what not to do—and it affected who I became as a young adult. There was one large problem area of my life that had not been set up well for success.

Naturally, my mental makeup in childhood was a hindrance to me in a few ways. I was a shy kid. Incredibly shy. So much so that it impeded my ability to learn in kindergarten. I didn’t talk, I didn’t raise my hand, I didn’t participate, I didn’t make friends. People thought I was special needs or that I didn’t know English. The truth was that I was raised bilingual from a young age (that unfortunately is no longer the case, and has not been for a long time). And I was and am incredibly smart. But at the tender age of five I was already afraid of saying the wrong answer. Anxiety had already planted its seed in me. It had already taken root. I remember vividly an instance when I raised my hand and didn’t get called on. The kid who did get called on ended up giving an answer that was different from mine. Whether my answer was the wrong one, his was, both or neither I don’t remember. What I do remember is focusing intently on the possibility of my answer being wrong. After that, I stopped raising my hand. I didn’t want to risk it. My fear of looking dumb was incredibly high. 

And that stayed with me for a long time. So not only was I shy, and had poor confidence, and poor people skills, but I was also extremely risk averse. In most areas of my life, but not all. I made a lot of conservative decisions growing up because it was safer that way. Safer to keep everything guarded and locked up tight. Safer not to make close friends because opening up and being vulnerable was scary. Safer not to commit to things in case they didn’t work out. And I stuck to that gameplan. For more than a decade I stuck to that gameplan. Despite all this, I did have an easier time making friends back then than I do now. Not to say that I can’t make friends or hold a conversation, but I don’t make friends because I don’t go out. And when I do, I don’t take initiative in starting conversations with new people. I’m much more of a reactive conversationalist than a proactive one. It’s an interesting contrast: young me (poor people skills, but a relatively easy time making friends) vs. old me (better people skills but spend much less time socializing). After my disastrous kindergarten year, I started to open up a bit. I didn’t start raising my hand or anything like that, but I started to talk when spoken to, and I made some friends. I still wasn’t great at it, but it was at least adequate enough where when we moved to Massachusetts when I was in 2nd grade, I came out of it fine. But then puberty hit, and things changed yet again.

That’s when things started to get rocky, although I didn’t exactly know it at the time. Puberty is a confusing time for everybody involved, let’s get that straight. It’s not just a time of transition for the kids. There’s also a period of adjustment for parents and teachers, and any adult influence in a kid’s life for that matter. Nobody knows what the fuck is going on. Kids start changing overnight. Parents and teachers don’t know which direction a kid may turn. They may think they know, but they can’t predict the future. Parents can prepare themselves for this as much as they want/can, but not everything will go according to expectation. I understand that may be scary and daunting for a parent. Puberty is when a parent starts to cede control of their kid. They start to make their own choices, and are no longer molded in your image. They are no longer the miniature version of you. They change. It is what it is. It’s something that needs to be worked through. Although the kid is changing and finding their way in the world, it doesn’t mean that there aren’t certain tools that a parent can’t still provide their kid.

My parents provided me with many tools to help me progress through life, and I’m grateful for that. But there was one thing that was missed, and I believe know that it became a large obstacle for me to navigate through for at least 15 years. My parents never talked to me about love, sex, or relationships. Never. You can only imagine how detrimental that was for me when I was trying to find my way in the world. Love is a difficult enough concept to grasp for those who have been educated about it. It’s already a case of trial & error as is. Young adolescents or people who are new to the dating scene will often ask, “how do you know if it’s real?” Or “how do you know what love is/feels like?” I don’t think there’s an exact answer. Even someone who’s in love, who’s married, or in a long-term relationship can’t quite explain the feeling. But just because the concept isn’t fully understood, doesn’t mean that you shouldn’t talk about it. The talk is something that needs to happen. Without having the talk I was utterly lost. 

Before you can even start talking about the L word though, you need to have a basic understanding of dating and relationships. But even before that, you need to know about the hormonal changes that come with puberty, and about human anatomy. They teach you that in school. It’s called sex ed. Problem is, I wasn’t exposed to sex ed. Every year between 5th grade and 8th grade, my parents had taken me out of the class. That’s fine, every parent has a right to do that. In fact, it’s quite common in the Chinese Christian community. But withdrawing from it comes with the expectation that the parents have an alternative curriculum in mind. In this scenario, the parent is supposed to teach the child about sex. That didn’t happen for me. My dad tried to read me a book once for about 30 minutes. As expected, it was an extremely awkward encounter, and we never talked about it ever again. The entirety of my sex education was thus composed of a combination of porn and one quarters-worth of health class that I took in 9th grade. By that point it was already too late. You can’t put the toothpaste back in the tube as they say. That one quarter of correct information/education couldn’t undo the damage that had already been caused by four years of setting false expectations. I had already embarked on a path of self-destruction.

You know that lyric that goes, “looking for love in all the wrong places?” That seems to be a common theme for many young adolescents at some point or another. That’s not necessarily a bad thing. Sometimes it’s easier to figure out what you like by eliminating all the things you don’t like. Dating really is just a microcosm of life in general. You’re finding your way in both things through trial and error mostly, with the help of other people’s experiences and prior knowledge. There’s no one right answer. It varies. It means different things to different people. As such it requires taking a leap and seeing what works. But it doesn’t give you an excuse to be reckless. 

And let me tell you, boy was I reckless. I was reckless with my words and with other people’s emotions. When other parties come into play, the consequences of your recklessness increase exponentially. It’s not just about you anymore, you’re affecting other people now (most likely negatively). Actions and words have dire repercussions. As a young, horny uneducated kid none of this came into consideration. I didn’t think of the emotions and feelings of other people because they never crossed my mind. I wasn’t sympathetic or empathetic. I was focused on myself. Everything was about me, and what served me. I was a narcissist. One that hated himself, but a narcissist nonetheless. In fairness, I didn’t know any better. I wasn’t taught this stuff. You’d think that growing up with two sisters would’ve helped matters. Prevented me from becoming stunted in the sphere of romance. Made me a “bring him home to meet the parents” type of a boy, but it didn’t in the slightest. We didn’t have that type of relationship back then; we mostly kept to ourselves. I was too self-centered and inward focused to take advice from anyone else, let alone my sisters. It would’ve taken some sort of miracle for me to change my ways. I didn’t know how to treat women with respect. I didn’t know how to not stare. I had a hard time distinguishing between a girl being nice to me and a girl being interested in me. 

There’s a difference. A huge difference. It’s not as subtle as some pubescent boys seem to think, self included. It’s quite overt and obvious. But if my sole source of sex education stemmed from porn, you can see how I had a huge problem. You can see how I was unable to read into the nuance. I was set up to fail, disaster had always been imminent, lying just beyond the horizon. Subsequently, I made a ruin of a number of friendships that I had, and I also made complete strangers entirely uncomfortable. But I didn’t know. I lacked self-awareness. I didn’t know how girls were supposed to be treated. I didn’t know what was creepy and what wasn’t. It was all a mystery to me. And unfortunately I attempted to solve the mystery in all the wrong ways. In a nonsensical manner that burned bridges. I mean I learned from it. But not for another ten years at the very least. It can be argued that I didn’t learn until 2018. If you want to claim that, I won’t dispute it. Either way, it was a long ass time before I had any semblance of knowing what to do.

What it really comes down to is this: the most important thing is that there’s mutual interest. This comes before anything even gets started. Is the person you’re interested in also interested in you? If the answer is yes, you can talk. There’s a reasonable starting point from there. The degree of interest may not be reciprocated, but that’s something to think about later. If the answer is maybe, then it might be worth looking into. You need to gather more information. If the answer is no, you move on. If you’ve been told no more than once don’t circle back! It’s done. It’s not happening! The problem for young boys is that we are sometimes so lost and self-absorbed, lacking so much self-awareness that we can’t even answer the simple question of is there mutual interest. We talk ourselves into believing that there is, but we don’t actually stop to think about it. We see a girl that we think is cute, and we go for it without thinking through the ramifications. Every choice that you make has ramifications, good or bad. But we’re oftentimes too stubborn or ignorant to acknowledge them. And that’s the pinnacle of folly. Quite a number of awkward, messy, or uncomfortable situations could’ve been prevented. If we had just thought through the details beforehand. If we had just faced the facts. Some of those facts are particularly damning. If we had just laid out the situation and reviewed the particulars, a whole lot of embarrassment could’ve been avoided. Of course, one party doesn’t even have a say in the matter.

That’s really the worst part. What we did affected someone else, and they had no control over the situation whatsoever. This whole messy, awkward, disturbing turn of events didn’t have to happen. It could’ve been prevented, but our little pervy, misogynistic mindset got in the way. I feel bad for the intended recipients of these “elaborate” displays of courtship. It’s frankly embarrassing. I sincerely apologize to all women on behalf of the creeps and former creeps that used to terrorize your lives. The little boys who caused you discomfort, unease, and pain. None of you ever deserved that. You didn’t deserve those wandering eyes, or those weird messages, or those creepy phone calls, or those strange comments/conversations. We males as a gender are dastardly and crude. We’re disgusting. God gave us a brain, but we don’t use it very often. Instead we opt to think with our smaller member primarily, and our heart secondarily. Neither gives you what you deserve. You deserve better, you deserve more from us. We have let you down spectacularly. 

If there’s one thing I regret from my younger days it’s this. There’s quite a number of women I’ve made uncomfortable in my life. You know who you are. I’m sorry for wasting your time. I’m sorry for being the crude person that I was. I’m sorry for being so damn creepy. I’m sorry for causing you discomfort, either with my eyes or with my words. I didn’t know any better, but that’s no excuse. Creepy behavior is creepy behavior, and there’s no justification for it. For that I’m sorry. Honestly looking back on it, I feel a delayed sense of embarrassment both for the person affected and for myself. I don’t think I was capable of feeling such embarrassment back then since I lacked self-awareness. But for the recipient of these gestures, I feel for you. Nobody wants to be hit on by a socially awkward and weird kid—regardless of gender, regardless of sexual orientation. You would just rather… not. I’ve been on the receiving end of this on occasion, and I can say that it is without a doubt an unsettling feeling. An unwanted gesture is an unwanted gesture. An uncomfortable feeling is an uncomfortable feeling. No one can change that. No one should be subjected to this type of stuff because a horny little boy didn’t know how to use his brain or know how to show interest properly. I know that I’ve learned from past experiences, and I’d like to believe that I killed that little boy in me a long time ago. That little weirdo shouldn’t exist anymore, he can’t exist. I’m trying to do better. It doesn’t require much if we’re being honest. Stop being a fucking weirdo, simple as that. Everyone craves attention sometimes, but not in this way. People are out here looking for romance, they’re not trying to sidestep creeps along the way.

Sorry to say, to the desperate boys out there, most girls want to be left alone. Don’t hit on them randomly in the gym, in class, or on the street. If you want to get to know someone, get to know them. For real. If you want her phone number, get it from her directly! Don’t get it through a third party. That my friend, is creepy/stalkerish/sociopathic behavior. It’s not okay. Talk to them like they’re real human beings, not objects. Don’t talk to them like they’re some prize to be won. Don’t talk to them like you think you’re doing them a favor. You’re not God’s gift to the world, hate to break it to you. If you hit them up first, you’re the one using up their time. Don’t be weird about it. There’s a few right ways to do it, but there’s many many more wrong ways. Take it from me. For 15+ years I went about things the wrong way. My methods weren’t all the same, they did change, but not for the better. I didn’t know what I was doing. 

Love, dating, and relationships were all a big mystery to me. The unsolvable puzzle that promised something incredible but failed to deliver. Some way, some how I lucked myself into a relationship in 2011/2012. Against all odds, I had duped someone into liking me and staying with me. But I wasn’t ready for it, and it showed. After our honeymoon phase our relationship steadily deteriorated. Whose fault was it? I’d say 85% mine. We weren’t right for each other first off. But I also hadn’t progressed far enough along as a functional human being. I wasn’t in a place where dating should’ve been anywhere on my mind, but it was all that was on it. I naively thought it was possible to love someone else while hating myself. I thought I could take care of someone else when I couldn’t even take care of myself. How’s that even remotely possible when you only think of your own wants and needs, and not those of others? I thought it was possible to be healthy enough to be in a relationship while neglecting all trauma and adversity in my life. I thought locking up the negativity, storing it away, and ignoring it would automatically make me mentally healthier. I thought that pretending that everything was okay would make things okay. But I couldn’t have been more wrong. It was nothing but a farce. I pretended that I was some sophisticated human being when I wasn’t. I was broken beyond repair. In the years after the breakup I blamed it for breaking me, but I was already broken before that. Long before that. But I needed someone or something to blame, because I wasn’t willing to hold myself accountable. I didn’t think about my mental health much back then, but if I had I probably would’ve deluded myself into thinking I was in a better place than I was. I was nowhere near healthy, and all of these misconceptions only made it worse. They left me rife with drama and inner turmoil.

I was a drama queen. It’s still there, although I’m better at controlling it for the most part. I’ll be honest, sometimes the inner queen does peek through nowadays. As much as things change and improve, you can’t quite take the drama out of a queen. It just doesn’t happen. What can I say? I’m a Leo. It’s in my nature. But understand this, for a long time I either refused to accept it or I didn’t see it. The drama swirled around me but it didn’t occur to me that I was its wellspring. I was the root. I caused the drama. It was only there because I created it. I birthed it. I was the sun and the drama revolved around me. It took me a long time to realize that. I used to wonder quietly why I always found myself involved with this type of bullshit. It didn’t occur to me that drama didn’t follow me, but rather I left it trailing in my wake.

Somehow that fact went way over my head. It wasn’t that I was close to drama or that drama followed me around. That wasn’t it at all. Instead I created it willfully, and let it swirl around me. Either oblivious of who it affected or unconcerned or both. I was reckless and it didn’t matter to me. I was lost in my own world. I was stuck in a story where I was the main character and no one else around me even mattered. They were all side characters that came and went in my life. This arrogant disregard for other beings led to my downfall. Not directly—it took a roundabout way—but eventually it led me to my darkest day. My darkest day only happened because I had set myself up to fail year after year after year. I was stringing along from disappointment to disappointment. And as much as I liked to believe that my life was out of my control, that I was just being railroaded along, that wasn’t really the issue nor was it the case. The issue was that I had established a false sense of identity. I had given myself false hope. I had fed myself lies for more than a decade. I had consistently created inaccurate assumptions about what a relationship was supposed to look like. This caused me to create unrealistic expectations of what would happen in certain dynamics. 

Whether it was me pursuing girls I shouldn’t have pursued, or it was reacting in a way that wasn’t warranted, or it was coming on too strong, things always found a way to fall apart. Not because fate despised me or that life was unfair (as I had thought), but because the situation had always been set up to fail from the start. Set up to fail through my error, through my ignorance, through my arrogance. But most importantly through my inability to set realistic expectations. There had always only been one likely outcome. The results always turned out the same because the process had remained the same. The same shoddy, unsatisfactory, mediocre process. I didn’t learn from my mistakes then. I just kept making the same ones over and over again, but with different people. If that’s not the definition of reckless then I don’t know what is. I played with people’s emotions because they weren’t tangible to me. Thinking of others wasn’t a concept that I grasped. It wasn’t my MO, it wasn’t in my DNA. If I didn’t spend much time thinking of other people in general, the likelihood of thinking about their emotions in specific was non-existent. I don’t know what’s worse: doing the same thing over and over again because you don’t have the wherewithal to learn from your blunders; being too stubborn to change your approach; or being so negligent that you just pick up and discard romantic interests targets victims as they come into your line of sight. I was guilty of all three because I just wasn’t as knowledgable as I thought myself to be.

I used to have a tagline on an old blog that said, “I’m a realist, not a dreamer.” But that statement couldn’t have been further from the truth. My presuppositions weren’t realistic. I foolishly just assumed that anyone would want to date me. That I was some sort of a catch. A broken person looking for someone to make him complete. How ludicrous! That’s not healthy. If you are broken, the missing pieces aren’t going to be found in a romantic connection. The missing pieces can only be found within your self. If you get into a relationship thinking that you can fix a broken person, you’re only going to be met with disappointment. That’s the biggest mistake that my ex made. She thought that she could fix me. She thought that it was her responsibility to try to, but it wasn’t. I had brought extra baggage into the relationship and it wasn’t fair to her and it wasn’t fair to us. It was a tough obstacle to overcome, and ultimately we tried and failed. But she had set herself up for failure with false expectations of her own. I was beyond repair at that point. What neither of us knew at the time was that things could and would get worse for me. I was nowhere near my darkest day. I was still six years away from finding true healing. I came into the relationship broken, I left broken, and would remain broken.

I was happily lost in my delusions though. I was blinded to the truth, and I was happily ignorant that way. It may not have been at the forefront of my mind, but thinking that I was a catch had definitely settled in comfortably, somewhere in my headspace. Somewhere unnoticeable but still prominent enough where it would greatly affect my mindset. Like I said, my sense of self was misguided and fallacious at best or deeply flawed and unfounded at worst. Warped, skewed, schizophrenic. Whatever you want to call it, it was wrong. I’ll admit that a lot of the adversity I faced in my life was as a result of my delusional thinking (both directly and indirectly). All of this should’ve been evident enough for me. The facts were laid out that way, but I refused to look at them. Finally being in a relationship after looking for so long wasn’t the turning point in my life that I thought it was. It was more of a fluke. Just a blip on my radar. A reprieve from the disorder that my love life consisted of. It was a small oasis in the desert of my soul. The years after my breakup were just as desperate and hopeless as the years prior. The workmanship was still shoddy, the process still piss-poor. 

I hadn’t worked on myself. I hadn’t improved my outlook. I had hidden my pain. I had medicated to numb the feeling. I hadn’t dealt with the breakup properly. I wasn’t capable of it. I was a runner. I always had been. I ran from my hardships, I ran from feelings of guilt, I ran from my pain. I didn’t want to deal with it because I didn’t know how. And I didn’t know how because I didn’t want to be hurt. I didn’t want to be hurt because I had foolishly thought that being a Christian meant that I would always have an incredibly blessed life. Some sort of utopia with no hardship, with no pain, with no suffering. That’s not realistic whatsoever. Living that way is just hoping for a pipe dream. It’s never going to happen. As I said last post, evil exists in the world. Negativity, pain, and hardship are as true to this world as heroism, positivity, and pleasantry. You can’t have the good without the bad. Adversity makes you stronger. It molds you into something better. It makes you a better version of yourself. Not accepting that tough times will come is living in denial. Denial of who you are and who you may become. The greatest version of you is still out there, waiting for you to reach out and grasp its hand. Waiting for you to embrace it. 

Embrace it you must. The good, the bad, and the ugly. You will learn from other’s experiences and you will learn from your own adversity. You have to deny your old nature in order to embrace your new. In denying who you were you must come to an understanding with it. Reflect and think on what needs to be changed. For me my duality of nature had been narcissist vs. anti-narcissist. My inflated ego prevented me from accepting advice and realizing that I needed to find an alternate method. But my low self-esteem and sense of self-worth made me feel like the world was out to get me when things inevitably went wrong. Both sides of that coin prevented me from seeing how life really is. Both sides kept me blinded to reality. My reality was not true reality. I lived a life of delusion. And I needed to break down both walls. None of the methods I was using served me in a way that was beneficial. I didn’t know better because I didn’t allow myself to be taught better. My arrogance sheltered me from the consequences of real life. It was nice in the short-term—I didn’t have to deal with grief or sorrow right away—but it stunted my growth in the long-term. Deal with your issues head-on. You’ll be better for it. That being said, I should probably email my dad back. Delaying so would only be reverting to old ways. Delaying would only be running away, and I don’t run away anymore.