by Q.Araignee » Wednesday 12 March 2008 11:27:27am
I'm going to apologise in advance for this post, but I really need to write this all down somewhere- no one has to reply, this is purely intended as a cathartic exercise.
Two years ago, just before my GCSE's, me great-gran died. She had been the most constant thing in my life, a huge part of it for as long as I can remember. She'd been ill but was recovering unusually well, so when the call came we were all completely unprepared. At that time, everyone in the family looked for someone to be strong- they needed a stoic image to lean on and to imitate, but no one stepped up. Seeing them all crumbling I took up the task- putting up a front of normality which I have been unable to relinquish since.
I spent weeks listening and caring for my family, and starting my GCSE exams. I didn't do myself justice really, especially on my Latin exams, but I passed with an A*, 8A's, 2 B's and a C in the Latin. While everyone clawed back their everyday selves I found myself a bit isolated amongst them: they had had me to talk to, yet none had the composure to let me talk to them about what had happened, to let me truly grieve.
So I tried to put my feelings aside and carry on into Sixth Form. Most of my friends left to go to college, but 3 remained who I could relax with- I didn't feel comfortable with the idea of burdening them with my problems, so I didn't. I helped them in any way possible, and asked nothing but company in return.
The situation between my mum and step-dad degraded and so I inadvertantly became my mum's confidant- on top of hearing their arguments, I knew more about what was going on than I needed to know, and I found myself fretting over it at school or having vague nightmares.
Xmas followed swiftly. I had exams in January, my first real A Level papers. A few days before they started, I found out my first Judo sensei's father had died. We had been close, for he had been a good friend of my step-dad for many years. Again, my exams were affected.
As more time passed, the worse things got- just before my summer exams my Physics teacher noticed a crack in the mask I portrayed at school, but I didn't open up. He accepted that and said that 'You know where I am if you need anything.' Those exams were a mixture of good and bad, due to the constantly fluctuating situations at home and- more predominantly- the imbalances in my mental state.
That summer had the added difficulty of me convincing my mum and step-dad that I wasn't a lazy good-for-nothing, and that while Biochemistry (my choice of uni subject for 3 years) wasn't for me Physics was. I wasn't popular at home for about a month.
This school year started. I was now left with only one real friend, and to be honest he's not any good at noticing differences in emotions in other people. He means well, but can't always grasp them. Again, my Physics teacher noticed something wrong and asked me about it- I was uncomfortable and vague, so he soon stopped me and said I could use his lab as a place to escape from everything. To this day, it has been an amazing aid.
The term continued, and I made became proper friends with a girl who had been subject to the same 'friends disappearing act'- we had known each other before, been in the same Chemistry class, and while we may not have been best friends we were pretty close. Xmas came again, complete with argument over dinner. And again, I was to be informed someone I knew had died- my newest good friend. I scrabbled through my first few exams as last year. But my Physics exam was where my facade was truly undone.
The day before, my great-aunt had come round and made some off-hand comment that I didn't really notice. Monday came, I sat down, and opened my paper. I smiled at the question, and for some reason remembered what my great-aunt had said- 'You are so much like you're gran, more than the rest of us put together. If she couls see you know she would be so proud.' After that, I spent about 15 minutes crying silently and just staring at my paper. I shook myself out of it long enough to give the exam an go and to get out of that room asap- and to my Physics teacher's lab. I'd thought he was out all day, but he walked in on me weeping and listened while I basically told him a less coherent form of what I've written here.
My emotions had finally broke free from their restraints and claimed me.
It's taken a fair while to regain some stability. At the time, the situation at home still prevented me from showing my emotions fully to anyone there. And now, after weeks of struggling, we've reached another crux: my step-dad- the cause of so much strife, of so many of my darkest nightmares, yet the man who has helped raise me since I was 10 months old- has probably got a cancer in his mouth a cirrhosis of the liver. And my feelings about this are so confused and conflicting...
I'm sorry- but I needed to put all this down somewhere my family won't see, and this seemed like the 'best' place if I can say it like that.