A girl with emotional prolems finds a way to make her problems disappear |
The Bathroom Wall by Mo Juenger There are stories all around me untold stories that we've all heard. Scratched in, forbidden but still there, with bloodred pens on dented tin blue stall doors. Oh, yes, the words echo all around her as she cries, silently so that no one comes to hurt her one more time. She looks around, barely wanting to, sees her name in the messages and she knows they know she sees. The words are like daggers and they have carved messages into our minds, and our bodies. Oh, she’s not blind. Everybody's talking, and they won't stop the hate they emanate. They tell stories, scrawl the hatred that they hold within. Misdirected hatred because they're insecure or bullied or their parents are divorced or alcoholic or abusive. But sometimes she don't care. Some days, some very painful days, she don't really care why they hate me. she just hates that she hates that they hate anything she loves. Because some terrible days it is all just too much hate. Even though they all have a story to tell, they all have a hateful little story to keep. They'll make a deal with her, a secret for a secret. A deal that they only keep the hardened half-way. A story for a story, no, they won't tell you theirs. But her secrets, they are all smeared across the stall doors and walls in marker and pen and pencil now, because she has said too much. We all have secrets, it is a sacred part of us. But some of us have been hurt. Some of us are missing our secrecy. Those hurt and pained and abused people who hurt and pain and abuse her. They tear the little secrets out of her, ripping them from her soul while the blood of her own dark guilt and embarassment and love just spills like anything but wine. And they take one more virtue: her dignity. So she finds herself bare, naked of any value while those who have taken her faults and filled themselves with her empty imperfections just so they can say to have it, they use the blood she has shed to paste her secrets, dirty secrets on the wall. And the words on the hollow tin doors, they hurt, because they are true. Everyone sees the words, and they must ask her, Is it true? and she must deny what she knows is real. It is not invisible to the ones who are supposed to stop it, but they nearly ignore the overall sins. They look through the rules, and put it in the files and call the parents so that the horrible children who are still undeserving of this, can both just get beaten for one more bruise or broken bone. Because the teachers at the School of Hate think they know it all, think that this girl is safe now. Yes, they have stopped one crime but started two more. And even though one victory and two losses have been so clearly obvious that they are hidden, the words on the wall have been scrubbed off by a man who is used to the hate. And for a day, they all feel grateful because maybe, just maybe, the memories will all just fade away into the darkness from which they came and will forever stay engulfed in. And then tomorrow the words are back. A girl who cuts herself because her mom tells her that she hates her because she's dumb cries in the bathroom where she hides from the rest of society, and the tears flood the whole wide world. And she turns around, and she knows the door was cleaned yesterday by the man with the denim jacket. But what she doesn't know is that the girl with the press-on nails were in here yesterday, and they scraped through the paint with their hate. Why don't you just switch schools, or disappear, or die? it asks her, the girls who wrote that don't know how often the girl who cuts just wants to. And the girl stares down at her wrist, and she decides. Now they'll be satisfied, and she makes the cut. Dreams gone, wishes gone. She goes quickly. And somewhere deep in the fiery flames of all versions of hatred, the girls with press-on nails guiltily pretend to cry at the other girls funeral. Sitting two rows ahead of them, is the janitor with the denim jacket the father of the girl in the casket. |