“A Prayer I Shouldn’t Have to Say”

📌 Note to Readers (beginning):

This post contains raw, vulnerable content about suicidal thoughts, self-harm, and deep emotional pain. It’s not meant to shock—it’s meant to tell the truth. If you are struggling, please know you are not alone. This is my way of surviving. If you choose to keep reading, thank you for holding this with care. If you’re someone who loves me, thank you for still being here.


📝 The Poem:

A Prayer I Shouldn’t Have to Say
(for the girl who keeps waking up anyway)

Sometimes,
I wish I could die.
And I’m so fucking scared
because the wish keeps growing—
quietly, like mold in a room I forgot to check.
It doesn’t scream.
It waits.

I used to keep an ESPN article bookmarked—
about a runner at Penn State
who jumped off a parking garage.
I reread it like scripture.
Not because I wanted to be her,
but because I already was.
Just slower to the edge.

In college,
I started researching methods.
Not for shock value.
For comfort.
Like maybe if I knew enough
it would be easier
when the time came.
Like maybe knowing gave me power
over something.

While teaching,
I locked myself in my bathroom at home
more times than I’ll admit.
Laid on the cold tile of classrooms
after everyone left,
wishing I wouldn’t get up.

Still now,
I find rooms with doors I can close—
not to shut people out,
but to lie down and hope
I’ll just
stop.

Because facing it
feels like drowning in daylight.
Because trying
feels like dragging my bones
through broken glass
just to smile at a meeting.

And I still pray—
To God,
To Goddess,
To whatever might cradle the wreck of me—

Please,
take me instead.
Let my death do something useful.
Spare someone better.

I know it would destroy my parents.
They’ve already lost a child.
They’d give anything to keep me.
And that’s the catch—
I want to leave,
but I don’t want to hurt them.
So I stay.
Like a ghost with obligations.

If you’re listening,
God, Goddess, anyone—
make this life holy again.
Make breath feel like more than survival.
Make staying feel
like something other than surrender.

Please,
make it matter
that I stayed.


And maybe—
maybe there’s something waiting
just past the next morning.
A hand I haven’t held yet.
A moment that doesn’t ache.
A softness I’ll recognize
as my own.

Maybe
the staying
isn’t the end
of the story.

Maybe it’s the start
of the healing.


📌 Note to Readers (end):

If this resonated with you because you’ve felt these same things—please, please stay. The world is heavy, but it’s not hopeless. You are not alone, and you are not beyond saving. I’m still here. You can be too.

If you or someone you love is struggling, please reach out:

  • Call or text 988 (U.S. Suicide & Crisis Lifeline)
  • Text HOME to 741741 (Crisis Text Line, U.S.)
  • Or find support near you at befrienders.org

🔥 My Brain on Fire: ADHD Edition (Unmasking, One Post at a Time)

“My Brain on Fire: ADHD Edition”
 🧠 An essay from Unmasking, One Post at a Time — Entry Four

A person smiling while sitting on the floor, holding a paintbrush with their teeth and giving a thumbs-up, surrounded by art supplies and partially completed artwork.

Some days, my brain feels like a wildfire.
Everything is urgent. Everything is now.
And somehow… I still forget to respond to that one text I opened three hours ago.


Living with ADHD means living inside a mind that’s constantly running laps.
Thoughts sprinting. Emotions bursting.
Ideas bouncing like pinballs while I’m just trying to find my keys, which are in the fridge.
Again.


I have:

  • About 16 unfinished art projects (actually there’s too many to count I just made up the number 16 lol)
  • Three cups of half-drunk tea, 2 cans of half-drunk diet coke, and the glass of water I forgot to sip on
  • 74 tabs open (but I know exactly what’s in each one)
  • A to-do list I rewrote four times and then lost every single one of them
  • Big dreams
  • No concept of time
  • And a habit of spiraling into research rabbit holes that end with me crying over a documentary about deep sea coral

I forget things constantly—but I remember things deeply.
I can’t start tasks sometimes—but once I do, you might not hear from me for six hours because I’ve hyperfocused myself into a parallel universe.

It’s not just distractibility.
It’s intensity.
Of thought. Of feeling. Of motion.


People say ADHD is “just being hyper” or “bad at paying attention.”
But no one talks about:

  • The guilt of always being behind
  • The panic of missing a deadline you meant to meet
  • The shame of being called lazy when your brain is actually sprinting at full speed toward everything except what you were supposed to do
  • The frustration of knowing what you need to do, but not being able to start

No one talks about how isolating it is to feel like you’re failing at basic tasks while also being brilliant in ways no one measures.


And it’s not all bad.
There’s so much magic in the ADHD brain, too.

I can come up with ideas that make people pause and go, “Wait… that’s actually brilliant.”
I can connect seemingly unrelated things like I’m weaving a constellation.
I can love fiercely, create spontaneously, and dive into things with my whole heart.
I can notice beauty in overlooked places. I can feel things big.

But none of that means it’s easy.
And most days, I don’t want praise or pity.
I just want understanding.


If my brain is on fire, I’m trying to learn how to stop yelling at the flames and start dancing with them.
Some days I get burned.
Some days I glow.
But either way, it’s me. It’s all me.

And I’m not lazy.
I’m just wired differently.
And honestly? That fire fuels some beautiful things.

Screenshot of a computer screen displaying a questionnaire about lifestyle and health, with emphasis on distractibility. The text below describes the user's feelings of being overwhelmed by the 70-question ADD test.

🧘‍♀️ “Meditation Isn’t Just for Monks (And Other Myths I Used to Believe)”

“You don’t need a quiet mind to meditate. You just need a moment. That’s enough.”

Let me guess:
You’ve heard about meditation.
You’ve maybe even downloaded an app once.
You tried sitting still for three minutes, got annoyed at your own thoughts, and decided, “Yeah, no. This isn’t for me.”

Same.
Until it was.

I used to think meditation was only for people who drank green juice, went to Bali on silent retreats, or lived in mountain caves. I didn’t think it was for someone like me—messy-minded, overthinking, overstimulated me.

But then life got heavy. And loud. And fast. And my brain got tired of always being “on.” So I sat down one day, hit play on a five-minute guided meditation, and tried again.
This time, I let it be awkward. I let my thoughts wander. I didn’t try to “clear my mind.”
I just… breathed.
And wow.


✨ So Why Should You Try Meditation?

Even if you’re skeptical. Even if you’re fidgety. Even if you “don’t have time.”
Here’s why:

🧠 1. Your Brain Will Thank You

Meditation improves focus, memory, and emotional regulation. It literally changes your brain. Like, MRI-scan-level changes. More gray matter in areas linked to learning and memory. Less activity in the amygdala (hello, stress reduction). Science says so.

🫀 2. Your Body Will Too

Lower blood pressure. Reduced cortisol levels. Better sleep. Fewer headaches. Less muscle tension. It’s like giving your nervous system a spa day—no appointment needed.

💥 3. It Teaches You How to Pause

Instead of reacting to every annoying thing or spiraling into panic, you learn to take a breath. A beat. A moment. That’s powerful stuff, especially in a world that loves to rush.

💬 4. You Don’t Have to “Do It Right”

There’s no perfect posture or empty mind requirement. You can lie down. You can fidget. You can have thoughts. Meditation isn’t about shutting your brain off—it’s about noticing what’s going on in there, gently and curiously.


🪷 My Personal Practice (a.k.a. Realistic, Lazy-Girl Meditation)

Some days I sit cross-legged and light a candle. Other days I meditate while walking, doing dishes, or lying flat on my back in bed.
Sometimes it’s 15 minutes.
Sometimes it’s 90 seconds.
All of it counts.
The win is in showing up, not in doing it “perfectly.”


Still Not Convinced?

That’s okay. You don’t have to become a zen master overnight. But what if you just gave it 3 minutes today?
Close your eyes.
Breathe in.
Breathe out.
That’s it.

You’re already doing it.

Resume of a Soft Person (Professionally Confused Since 1992)

A person smiling in front of large green leaves, wearing a grey top and light pink shorts. They have earphones in and sunglasses on their head, standing against a natural backdrop.

“Resume of A Soft Person”
 An essay from Professionally Confused Since 1992 — Entry Four

2–3 minutes

Objective
To continue being human in systems that confuse urgency with value.
To create warmth, clarity, and connection—even when it’s not on the job description.
To survive with integrity intact.


Experience

Human First, Everything Else Second
All Workplaces, All the Time
2008–Present

  • De-escalated adults and children without ever raising my voice.
  • Built trust with people in distress, over the phone and across classrooms.
  • Learned how to stay calm when everything else was unraveling.
  • Treated coworkers, clients, and students like people, not tasks.
  • Earned the kind of compliments that don’t go on performance reviews, but stick with you for life.

Intake Whisperer
Law Firm #1 & #2
2021–2023

  • First voice people heard when their life had just cracked open.
  • Listened without judgment, and translated chaos into coherent facts.
  • Created space for people to tell hard truths without flinching.
  • Balanced compassion with boundaries in every conversation.
  • Became the person people asked for by name.

Teacher / Emotional Architect / Keeper of Snacks
Multiple Classrooms
2014–2022

  • Taught reading, math, and self-worth.
  • Helped students feel seen, even when the system didn’t.
  • Co-regulated through meltdowns and Monday mornings.
  • Built community, even when support was hard to come by.
  • Knew when a kid needed a break, not a punishment.

Skills

  • Reading a room faster than reading an email.
  • Leading with kindness while holding firm boundaries.
  • Keeping it together when nobody else is.
  • Writing messages that say what people need to hear, not just what they expect.
  • Making people feel safe enough to be real.

Education

Bachelor of Soft Power, Minor in Burnout
Informal but Intensive Training
2006–Present

  • Graduated with honors in giving a damn.
  • Capstone Project: “How to Be the Strong One Without Going Numb.”
  • Thesis in progress: “How to Keep Showing Up Without Disappearing.”

References

  • People who remember how I made them feel.
  • Students who still check in years later.
  • Coworkers who could breathe easier knowing I was on the clock.
  • My nervous system, now learning that rest is allowed.
  • Me, finally starting to believe that I am enough.

Narrative Outro
In the end, this resume isn’t a list of jobs or titles—it’s a testament to a way of being that refuses to let the world define my worth. It’s a quiet declaration that softness and strength can coexist, that caring deeply isn’t a flaw but a form of resilience. Every line here is a reminder that even amidst systems built to drain us, the simple act of showing up with openness and authenticity can rewrite the rules. I’m not chasing accolades—I’m cultivating a life that values being human over endless productivity.

Be Yourself, But Not Like That (Unmasking, One Post at a Time)

“Be Yourself, But Not Like That”
 🧠 An essay from Unmasking, One Post at a Time — Entry Three


“Be yourself,” they say. But only if it makes everyone else comfortable.


A woman wearing a yellow raincoat stands outdoors with her hair blowing in the wind, against a cloudy sky and a water backdrop.

💬 The Double Bind

“You should just be yourself!”

Except when I try, it’s suddenly too much, too weird, too intense, too soft, too different. The social advice to “be yourself” often comes with invisible conditions — ones that feel impossible for someone like me to meet.

I’ve learned that the world doesn’t actually want authenticity. It wants a curated version of it — one that doesn’t disrupt the flow, question the vibe, or take up space in a way that makes people uncomfortable.

Especially if you’re autistic. Especially if you’re a woman.


🧍🏽‍♀️ The Teacher Friend

At Warrington, one of the hardest jobs I’ve ever had, I had a teacher friend who told me I needed to stop caring so much. She wanted me to act like her — tougher, louder, colder. She said it would help me survive the chaos of our school. Maybe she meant well. Maybe she didn’t. I was too exhausted to know the difference.

The truth was, I needed support. Teaching was goddamn hard. I was pouring everything into those kids. But I couldn’t turn off who I was. I couldn’t fake being callous or detached. That’s not how I work — and it never has been.

When I did show up as myself, when my real personality inevitably bubbled through, she and another teacher would make fun of me. Little digs, little laughs. I started shrinking. Quieting. Second-guessing everything. I was still burning out, just more silently.


👗 The Panama City Girls Trip from Hell

Another time, I went on a trip to Panama City with two girlfriends who made me feel like I was failing some invisible test of womanhood. They wanted me to like the things they liked. Dress the way they dressed. React to the world how they did. I didn’t — I couldn’t. So I spent the trip trying to disappear.

I ended up getting so drunk one night that I peed on myself. I was trying so hard not to feel anything, to be someone else, to escape the absolute discomfort of not belonging.

I wanted to go home. I wanted to be alone. I didn’t want to be anyone but me — but I didn’t know how to be me without paying for it.


🔁 Repeat

This wasn’t a one-time thing. It’s been the pattern.

Be yourself — but not like that.
Have emotions — but not those ones.
Talk — but not too much.
Don’t talk — but don’t be weird about it.

People want quirky, not clinical. Empathy, not shutdowns. Passion, but in moderation. And always — always — the kind of “different” they can laugh at but never be uncomfortable around.


🌱 What I Know Now

I know now that those friendships weren’t safe. They weren’t made for someone like me to exist in fully. But at the time, I thought I just had to try harder. Be better. Be cooler. Be quieter. Be… less.

But you know what?

I’m done with that. I’m done trying to be someone else’s idea of tolerable.

Because being myself — actually being myself — has cost me a lot. But it’s also brought me home.

To the right people.
To real softness.
To joy I don’t have to explain.
To art and cats and poetry and long walks and all the weird, wonderful things that make me me.

A woman wearing headphones and a blue beanie is holding a twig with small green buds, smiling slightly at the camera.

Burnout as a Lifestyle (Professionally Confused Since 1992)

A group of elementary school students gathered around tables in a classroom, with a teacher standing and holding a folder, engaged in an interactive activity.

“Burnout as a Lifestyle”
 An essay from Professionally Confused Since 1992 — Entry Three

Things That Have Burned Me Out, In No Particular Order:

  • Student teaching. And then actual teaching. And then quitting. And then going back. And then quitting again.
  • Staying late at school to make the classroom feel like a home, only to be told by administration that I needed to improve my “time management.”
  • Getting COVID and teaching through it. Teaching during BLM. Teaching after Hurricane Sally. Teaching during everything and nothing.
  • Working in schools where we were told to make magic out of trauma. Where we were told to teach kids how to regulate before they’d even been given enough food or safety or sleep.
  • Helping other people regulate their nervous systems while mine was on fire.
  • Every single professional development session about “self-care” while being given fewer resources and more students.
  • Learning to love my students deeply and having to say goodbye over and over again.
  • Law firms that said “we’re like a family” and then made me talk to 90 people a day while smiling through panic attacks.
  • Being autistic and masking for so long I forgot what I actually wanted and who I was doing all this for.
  • Pretending to be okay so convincingly that no one noticed when I wasn’t.

Burnout doesn’t always look like collapse.
Sometimes it looks like showing up every day with a smile you carved out of your own skin.
Sometimes it looks like organizing the fridge while dissociating.
Sometimes it looks like daydreaming about an illness just bad enough to force a pause.

You don’t just have burnout.
You become it.
You become the shell that keeps moving. The autopilot. The expert in pretending.


The Aftermath

  • The emptiness after quitting. The way silence hums louder when you’re no longer useful to someone else.
  • Staring at walls, wondering who I am without a job to orbit around. Without a crisis to manage. Without a fire to throw myself into.
  • People asking, “So what’s next?” like I didn’t just crawl out of a burning building.
  • The shame spiral of rest. Of stillness. Of needing time and not being able to earn it.
  • Trying to “get better” fast enough to make the burnout worth it. To justify the collapse.
  • Grieving the person I had to be to survive. And also grieving the people who still expect me to be her.
  • Losing access to joy because everything feels like it could become a job again if I’m not careful.
  • Forgetting what it feels like to want something. Not just tolerate it. Not just endure it. Want it.

The aftermath is quiet, but it isn’t peaceful.
It’s disorienting.
Like waking up in a stranger’s house with no memory of how you got there.
Like realizing you’ve been surviving on emergency mode for years, and now you can’t remember your own favorite color.


Recovery isn’t a glow-up.
It’s crying because you finally feel safe enough to feel anything.
It’s staring at a blank calendar and feeling your nervous system twitch with withdrawal.
It’s learning to rest without bargaining.
It’s mourning all the years you pushed through instead of pausing.


But here’s what I know now:

Burnout is not a personal failure.
It’s not a weakness.
It’s not proof that you weren’t strong enough.

It’s the body’s last attempt at protection.
It’s your spirit throwing a wrench into the machine.
It’s your soul saying: This is not sustainable. This is not love. This is not life.


So no, I don’t have a five-year plan.
I don’t know what my next job title will be.
But I do know I don’t want to live a life that requires me to be exhausted in order to feel valuable.

I want to live slowly.
I want to rest without guilt.
I want softness without scarcity.
I want joy that isn’t mined from pain.

Maybe I won’t have a resume that makes sense.
Maybe I’ll never climb a ladder.
But I’m learning that surviving isn’t the same as living.
And I’m tired of surviving.

I want to build a life where I don’t have to burn out to belong.
Where I am allowed to be whole, even if I’m not productive.
Where warmth isn’t a job requirement—it’s just who I am, freely given, finally kept.

A classroom scene with several children raising their hands, and a teacher standing at the front. The room is decorated with educational materials, and an American flag is visible in the background.

None of Your Business: Bodily Autonomy and the Power of Being a Woman

Salt-N-Pepa were yelling truth through my headphones when this essay started writing itself in my head.

“If I wanna take a guy home with me tonight, it’s none of your business!”

I wasn’t just listening—I was lip-syncing, stomping around my home like a woman possessed. That song doesn’t ask for permission. It doesn’t play nice. It kicks down the door and makes space for a woman to say, I belong to no one but me.

And as I sang those words loud enough for the neighbors to hear, I realized: this is it. This is the whole damn point.

Women get practically nothing in this world—not full safety, not full respect, not equal rights. But if we don’t even get our own bodies? Then what do we have left?

I’m not totally hopeless. I wish I could say I believe the patriarchy will collapse in my lifetime, but I don’t know. Maybe it will—and if it does, I’ll probably cry and pee myself out of pure joy. But until then, I want to be crystal clear about one thing:

A woman’s body belongs to her. No one else.

Let me say it louder:
I’m a grown-ass woman, and what I do with my body is none of your fucking business.


Objectified at Birth

From the moment we’re born, people start telling us who we are based on how we look.

“She’s so pretty.”
“Look at those eyelashes!”
“You’ve got a little heartbreaker on your hands!”

Compliments before we can walk, before we can speak—and they’re always about our appearance. Pretty. Cute. Beautiful.

Have you ever heard someone walk up to a baby boy and say, “He’s so handsome, he’s gonna break hearts”? Not really. Boys are strong. Boys are tough. Boys are smart. Girls are pretty.

And so it begins—this quiet but constant training that tells us our worth lives on the outside. That we are here to be looked at. That our bodies are not just our own, but for others to comment on, rate, touch, control.

By the time we’re old enough to notice, it’s everywhere.
Dress codes. Street harassment. Politicians making choices about our reproductive rights.
Our bodies have been claimed by everyone but us.

And that is terrifying. That is infuriating.


Silenced in Real Life

It’s not just politics. It’s not just headlines. It’s in my friend groups. Especially with my guy friends.

I try to speak—talked over.
Try to share—told to shut the fuck up.
Try to exist—mocked, ignored, laughed at.

And when I yell—because sometimes that’s the only way to be heard—I’m called dramatic. Crazy. “Too much.”

What am I even doing there, then? What’s the point of friendship if I’m just background noise?

I try to explain patriarchy. I try to talk about gender and fairness and equity. But I’m treated like I’m making it all up. Like I’m the problem. Like I’m speaking a language they’ve already decided not to understand.

It’s isolating.
It’s exhausting.
It’s one of the reasons I’ve wanted to die.

Not the only reason—but a big one. Because when the world constantly erases you, it’s hard to feel like you matter. Like you belong.

And then there’s the confusion. Am I here to be pretty or respected? Do I have to choose?

Add autism to the mix—undiagnosed until 32—and people still act like they know me better than I know myself. “You don’t seem autistic.” “Are you sure?” Yes. I’m fucking sure. I’ve spent years untangling this. I’m still learning. We all are. But people don’t even try.

And still—here I am.
Saying it out loud anyway.


The Power They Can’t Take

For everything this world tries to strip from us—our voices, our safety, our sanity—it still hasn’t found a way to take the one thing that lives deep in our bones: our power.

It’s not the kind of power written into law.
It’s older than that.
Wilder. Quieter. Unshakeable.

And I wouldn’t trade it for anything.

If reincarnation is real, I’d come back as a woman again. Every time.

Because even though this world tries to make it seem like being a woman is a disadvantage, there’s something we carry that can’t be touched. A generational fire. A knowing. A legacy.

I think of all the women who weren’t allowed to speak. Who weren’t allowed to choose. Who weren’t allowed to dream—and still, somehow, they survived.

They fought. They wrote. They whispered truths. They lit the path. And now I’m here—pissed off, alive, and writing this.

Sometimes I think about Buffy the Vampire Slayer, and it all clicks. She holds the power of every girl before her. She fights because they fought. That’s what womanhood is to me.

Yes, I’m tired.
Yes, I’m angry.
But I am not alone.


Hope That’s Bigger Than Us

I don’t know if I’ll live to see the day women have full autonomy.
But I hope someone does.

I hope some girl grows up in a world where her voice is not just tolerated, but expected.
Where she doesn’t have to choose between being pretty and being respected.
Where her body is hers and hers alone.

Where no one tells her she’s “too much” for daring to take up space.

Where she’s free to be loud.
To be weird.
To be whole.

That world may feel far away.
But hope is power, too.

Sometimes it’s just the decision to keep going.
To write. To scream. To speak anyway.

Because even if they don’t listen—
We’re still here.

And I’ll keep blasting Salt-N-Pepa, stomping through my house, saying it as loud as I need to:

“It’s none of your business.”

My body. My rules. My life.

Try and take that from me—and see how loud I can be.

🎭 Masking 101 (And Why I’m Tired) (Unmasking, One Post at a Time)

“Masking 101 (And Why I’m Tired)”
 🧠 An essay from Unmasking, One Post at a Time — Entry One

Before I knew I was autistic or ADHD, I just thought I was working really hard at being a person.

Turns out, I was masking.


Masking is when you hide or camouflage parts of yourself so you can pass as “normal.”
It’s mimicking facial expressions, tone of voice, posture.
It’s copying how other people laugh or how they make eye contact.
It’s forcing yourself to suppress stimming.
It’s scripting conversations in your head before they happen.
It’s smiling when you want to scream.
It’s laughing when you’re confused.
It’s staying quiet when you’re overwhelmed.
It’s pretending you’re fine so no one thinks you’re difficult.

I’ve done it for so long, I used to think that was my personality.


When you’re autistic or ADHD—especially if you were socialized as a girl or assigned female at birth—masking becomes second nature.
We’re taught to be accommodating. Quiet. “Not too much.”
So we make ourselves smaller. We mirror people. We blend in until we disappear.

And sometimes we’re praised for it.

“She’s so mature for her age.”
“You’re so adaptable.”
“You always seem so calm.”

Calm? No. Just dissociating professionally.
Adaptable? Maybe. But at what cost?


Masking isn’t just exhausting. It’s identity-erasing.

I’ve walked out of social situations completely unsure who I was.
I’ve said “yes” when I meant “no,” just because it felt easier.
I’ve been praised for being chill when I was actually melting down inside.

People didn’t see my burnout—they saw “grace under pressure.”
People didn’t hear my sensory overwhelm—they heard “sensitivity.”
People didn’t notice my panic—they saw “perfectionism.”

Masking works… until it doesn’t.
And when it breaks down, it looks like depression. Anxiety. Burnout. Shutdown. Rage.
It looks like “what’s wrong with me?”
It looks like “I don’t know who I am anymore.”

And honestly? That’s where I was when I started unmasking.

Unmasking is not always peaceful.
Sometimes it’s letting people see you stim or cry or say something awkward.
Sometimes it’s choosing not to go to a thing—even if people expect you to.
Sometimes it’s saying “no” and feeling that old panic rise up… and doing it anyway.

It’s slow. It’s scary. It’s freeing.

I’m still tired.
But now it’s the kind of tired that comes from becoming, not disappearing.


If you’re masking, and you’re tired too—
you’re not alone.
You’re not broken.
And you’re allowed to rest.

🌀

“Unseen, Unheard” – a fictional horror story based on true events

Unseen, Unheard

Trigger Warning: This story contains themes of sexual assault, trauma, and psychological horror. Reader discretion is advised.


[Intro]

“Unseen, Unheard” is a psychological horror story that explores the haunting and often invisible trauma of sexual assault. Told through the journal entries of Sam, a young woman struggling with the aftermath of an assault and the supernatural forces that seem to follow her, this story weaves together the horrors of both real and imagined threats. It’s a journey into a mind trying to find peace, yet plagued by the shadows of the past.


Journal Entry 1

Date: January 15, 2014

I don’t know how to write this. I don’t know if this is even real. But I can’t get it out of my head.
It happened right after winter break, at the party at Scotty G’s house. I had felt safe there—everyone was laughing, music blasting, a familiar crowd of frat boys. He had always been so kind to me, joking around like we were friends. But that night? That night was different. I was laying on the couch, just resting my eyes. The world was fading in and out. Maybe I had too much to drink? Or maybe I didn’t drink enough?
And then I felt it. His hand. No. His finger. It slid in, without warning. I didn’t open my eyes. I didn’t want to. I didn’t want to make it real.


Journal Entry 2

Date: January 18, 2014

It’s like there’s a shadow following me everywhere. It’s not just in my head anymore.
I can’t look at Scotty G without seeing his smile, his grin, as if nothing happened. He still thinks we’re friends. He still invites me to hang out. He doesn’t know that I can’t stand being near him. I can’t look at his face without remembering the way he touched me when I wasn’t even awake.
I should’ve screamed. I should’ve fought back. Why didn’t I?


Journal Entry 3

Date: February 2, 2014

I keep hearing whispers. I don’t know where they’re coming from.
It’s like the walls are alive, like they know what happened. Every time I pass by them, I hear my name—soft, like a wind blowing through the trees. But no one else hears it. No one else knows.
The worst part is, I can’t get away from it. I feel like I’m suffocating. He’s everywhere. And it’s not just him anymore. It’s something darker, something older. The house, the room, the air—it all feels wrong.


Journal Entry 4

Date: March 1, 2014

I’ve stopped going to parties. I’ve stopped seeing people. The whispers are getting louder.
It’s like there’s something in the house now. At night, I hear it. Something scratching at the walls. It’s not Scotty G anymore. It’s… something else. Something angry.
I can’t sleep. I can’t think. And when I try, the darkness swallows me whole.


Journal Entry 5

Date: March 15, 2014

I don’t know who I am anymore.
I don’t know if what I’m seeing is real.
The house—the one I thought was my refuge—is now full of shadows. Figures I can’t make out. No one else can see them.
I keep hearing it. That voice. It’s him. I know it is. It calls me by name, softly at first, then louder. It’s as though he’s calling me to him, beckoning me to return. But I won’t. I can’t.


Journal Entry 6

Date: April 2, 2014

I saw him again. Scotty G. He smiled at me. I almost ran, but then I heard it. The whispers, louder than ever, telling me I had to stay, I had to face him.
I don’t know what to do. Every part of me wants to run, but I can’t seem to move.
The shadows are growing. The whispers are becoming screams.
I’m starting to think that maybe I’ll never be free of this. Maybe I’ll always be trapped here. In this house. With him.


Journal Entry 7

Date: March 18, 2024 (10 years later)

I’ve been hearing the whispers again. But this time, they’re different.
I don’t know if it’s the house, or the city, or just me, but I can feel it closing in.
I think he’s here. I think Scotty G is here, still with me. I still don’t know why he did it, why he took that piece of me, but now I’m realizing—maybe I wasn’t supposed to know. Maybe this was always going to happen.
I can’t escape the feeling that I’m already dead. That I’m just going through the motions, waiting to disappear completely.


Journal Entry 8

Date: March 22, 2024

I don’t know what I’m doing anymore.
The shadows are so much worse now. I feel them pressing against me when I walk, hear them creeping when I lie in bed at night. They’re not just whispers anymore—they’re… screams.
I’m afraid I’ll never leave this place.
And what scares me the most? I think I’ve stopped caring.


Final Journal Entry
Date: March 23, 2024

I can feel it, right behind me, getting closer. The whispers, the shadows—they’re all around me. I don’t know how much longer I can stand it.
The truth is, I don’t want to anymore. I don’t want to keep fighting. I think I’ve decided.
There’s only one way to make it stop. Only one way to escape.
And I’m almost ready to do it.


[End of Story]


Closing Thoughts

This story is deeply personal and not an easy one to share. It’s meant to shed light on the lingering effects of trauma, and how it can follow you in ways that others can’t see. If you or someone you know has experienced something similar, please reach out. You don’t have to go through it alone.

Warmth Isn’t a Job Title (Professionally Confused Since 1992)

“Warmth Isn’t a Job Title”
 An essay from Professionally Confused Since 1992 — Entry Two

People always tell me I’m warm. That I’m “such a light.” That I make people feel seen. I’ve been called sunshine in every workspace I’ve ever entered—schools, sorority houses, law firms, even part-time jobs I barely lasted in. It’s said with affection, usually. Admiration, even. Like it’s a gift I bring into the world. And sometimes, it feels like one.

But it’s also something I’ve learned to weaponize against myself.

Warmth became my strongest asset—and my greatest liability.
Because it kept getting me hired, but never saved me from burning out.

When I was a teacher, I was the one who made kids feel safe. The one they ran to when their parents were in jail or they’d had nightmares or just needed a snack and someone to notice they were hungry. I was the one my coworkers vented to. The one who stayed after meetings to talk through things, who remembered birthdays, who made people feel like they mattered.
And I did mean it. I do mean it. But warmth doesn’t protect you when the roof of your school is literally torn open and your classroom is flooded and no one seems to care that you’re drowning too.

After Hurricane Sally, a piece of metal was hanging off the building, swinging in the breeze. I made a joke one morning—something like, “Maybe it’ll finally come loose and decapitate me, and I won’t have to go inside.”
Everyone laughed. So did I.
But I wasn’t really joking.

I didn’t cry in my car. Not once. That’s not really how it shows up for me. I’m autistic, and my relationship with emotions is complicated. I didn’t sob or scream or punch the steering wheel. I just drove. Every day. Over the same bridge. Past the same water.

And almost every morning, I thought about veering off.

Not dramatically. Not emotionally. Just…logically. Like my brain offering a clean escape hatch I couldn’t stop noticing. If I just angled the wheel slightly to the right, maybe I wouldn’t have to do this anymore. Maybe I wouldn’t have to go back into that building with the flickering lights and the flooded carpets and the trauma pouring out of kids too small to carry it. Maybe I wouldn’t have to pretend to be okay.

Because that’s the thing about being warm: people expect it from you constantly. When you’re the “light,” there’s no room to flicker. When you’re the one who makes everyone else feel safe, no one stops to ask if you are.

So I kept going. I kept showing up. I kept being the warm, glowing presence people had come to rely on. I smiled. I made bulletin boards. I remembered everyone’s favorite personal things and their personal home lives. I played music and danced around the classroom and made my students laugh even when I felt like I was disappearing inside myself.

And it worked.
That’s what’s so messed up—it worked.
I was dying inside, and people just kept telling me how bright I was.

Later, when I wasn’t teaching anymore, the settings changed but the script didn’t. I worked at two different law firms—one big, one small—and in both places, I was the first voice people heard when they called for help. I worked intake, which meant I talked to people on some of their worst days. Car accidents. Medical trauma. Deaths of loved ones. Insurance nightmares. And just like in the classroom, I became good at making people feel safe. Like they could trust me. Like they could exhale.

People opened up to me quickly. I think they could tell I’d listen. That I actually cared. That I wasn’t in a rush to push them through a checklist and onto the next call. I asked follow-up questions. I remembered names. I let people be human with me.

And again—it worked. People praised my “people skills.” My empathy. My warmth. My magic touch on the phone. And again, I was glad to help. I wanted to be good at something that mattered.

But warmth is exhausting when it’s always flowing outward and never back in. You can’t keep handing people pieces of yourself and expect not to go hollow eventually. I was the “bright spot” on every team. The calm voice in chaos. The one people came to when they were upset, even if they outranked me. Especially then.

And I think what hurts the most is… it did matter. It always mattered to someone. But it never felt like enough to matter to the system. Not to capitalism. Not to the structure that chews people up and spits them out as long as the metrics are met.

I could be a ball of sunshine, but the sun doesn’t get PTO. The sun doesn’t get to quit. The sun just rises again—every morning, even when it’s burning out.

I’ve been working since I was 14. Babysitting. Retail. Food service. Odd jobs. Customer service. Admin work. Teaching. Law firms. You name it, I’ve probably done it or something close. At some point, it stopped being a way to grow and just became a way to survive.

And the longer I did it, the more I started to feel like my entire personality was a resume skill. Organized. Compassionate. Adaptable. Emotionally intelligent. A team player. A people person. A fast learner. A warm presence.

Which is to say: marketable. Not whole.
Not really me.

Because no matter how many jobs I did, no matter how good I was at them, they never seemed to lead anywhere. Or maybe they did—but the “somewhere” was just more of the same: burnout, detachment, fleeting praise, and the slow erosion of my inner world. The truth is, I don’t want to spend my life being someone else’s good idea of a helpful person while quietly fantasizing about escape.

I don’t want to be so damn useful that I forget I’m also a person.

And maybe that’s the part I’m still grieving: how many years I spent thinking that being good at work would make me feel like I had a purpose. Like I had a path. Like I was building something that would eventually feel worth it.

But mostly, it just made me tired.
And confused.
And so, so alone.

It’s taken me a long time to realize that burnout isn’t a personal failure. It’s often just the natural outcome of being deeply human in systems that reward detachment.

And I’ve always been deeply human, even when I couldn’t name it. Even when I didn’t cry in the car or melt down at work or fall apart in the ways people expect. I just kept going, quietly breaking down in ways no one could see. But that’s starting to change. I’m learning to notice the cracks before everything caves in.

I’m also learning that being warm isn’t something to be ashamed of. It’s not a “soft skill” on a resume or a trait to downplay so I seem more professional. It’s a kind of wisdom. A strength. A way of moving through the world that brings connection, not just productivity. And while it’s been used against me—extracted, expected, taken for granted—it’s still mine.

I don’t know what my next job will be, or if I’ll ever have a “career” in the traditional sense. But I’m not chasing titles anymore. I’m chasing alignment. Sustainability. Reciprocity. Joy.

I don’t want to be the sun that never gets to rest. I want to be a candlelit intentionally—glowing gently in the spaces where it feels good to be seen, and safe enough to dim. Because warmth isn’t a job title.
But it might be the most honest part of who I am.