Well, fun. A reasonable day has gone downhill into bad day. Not as bad as Duke's (my condolences, man), but pretty bad. The creative writing class made me want to stab people--it's full of middle-aged women writing their memoirs and young men who want to forget that they have miserable pointless jobs. Apparently the entire class goes drinking after they're done.
Peachy. At 20, I'm probably the youngest person there by at least 5 years.
Then, we're apparently supposed to write a couple of paragraphs (must be actually true) about the worst thing we ever did. I don't have a worst thing. Yes, I have a bad temper, and I snip at people, and instead of backing off when my boyfriend was being troublesome I might have argued more than I strictly should have. We're supposed to write a novel about this. Really? Is there really a novel in "once there was a young woman who wanted to be a great mathematician, and argued with her mother rather a lot, which made her mother very, very depressed, so the young woman was very, very bad and morally irredeemable." Or maybe I'm supposed to write "Once a young woman fell in love with the wrong man, and when she stopped saying 'yes dear' and let him know that she sometimes felt alone and miserable in this trying world, he couldn't take it. Rather than understanding, she thought it was a communications problem and, in her attempts to communicate, hurt him."
Spectacular. Those sound like exactly the sorts of novels I want to write.
So I'm sitting in the back of the class, thinking about how Thyme goes out drinking and lives it up, and how maybe she should be the one in my place--not because she's done anything wrong, but because her (realistically rather tame) life might be at least slightly more libertine than mine. She has a boyfriend and a group of friends who are familiar with drugs and alcohol, so she has some chance at a debauched lifestyle. I'm also sitting back there being miserable because the entire class session can be distilled to "write what you know" and "have rising and falling action." I'm really bored, in fact, which is why I'm busy thinking about Thyme being debauched and how I'm not sure if I have a worst thing I've done or not.
Class is dismissed, and as I'm leaving the teacher puts his hand on my shoulder and says "Don't be sad."
Curses. Nice to meet you, too, mister. Next time I'll be sure to mention that you're balding and really short, since everyone likes those sorts of things put on display on first acquaintance.
Right around then is when I leave and, since I'm being picked up by my mom, end up telling her the whole spiel. At some point, I tell her that I don't have anything I feel particularly guilty about--no stories I need to get off my chest--and she tells me I should feel guilty for having occasionally hurt her without apologizing in the past (i.e., when I was 16, 18, whatever). Guilty. Eaten. Then we move on to discussing a different assignment, which is apparently supposed to be some sort of argument between a man and a woman. It's the framework for what's supposed to be an exercise on freeform dialogue. Onwards to a rant about how things used to be more simple. They were better. The women stayed home with the kids--no, they didn't get jobs. That wasn't how things were. Women stayed home with the kids. I attempted to intimate that perhaps I wouldn't like to stay home with children, and maybe I would like a job, and maybe I would be miserable if I had to waste what I am on raising children. I am good at numbers. I am bad at children, so help me.
Well, she doesn't like that answer. She likes the times back when you pretty much only saw white people, and women didn't have jobs. No gay marriages. Good American white-bread families with a mother and a father and two kids, and dad goes off to work in the mornings and mom stays home to raise the children. Picket fences. Soft women and strong men with manly jaws.
I am not a soft woman. I am not a particularly nurturing woman. I do not want children or a husband to tell me what to do. I may never get married. I will probably never have children, adopted or otherwise.
I am tired of listening to her rants about people of color, homosexuals, people with disabilities taking money away from those who deserve it, and her prods for me to go find a nice man, get married, have children, and stay home with them. She doesn't know that I was diagnosed with mild autism twice, or that I'm bisexual. She doesn't know that I don't really identify that strongly with either gender. She doesn't know that I do sympathize with marginalized groups of all stripes, and that I don't actually care that much about them [whatevers] coming and stealing our American jobs. I am not scared of the Mexicans or the Chinese. I do not worry that much about the fluoride in the water. It is not just because I am young. It is because sometimes there will be a sucker, and I am not necessarily the main character of this story. If I lose and others benefit, then that will be the way it went.
Neither she nor my father will know any of these things. I am too busy being the dutiful daughter.
tl;dr: I may be dropping my novel-writing class, and my relationship with my mother is as turbulent as ever.