How Are You?

May. 11, 2012
Steph is a former editor at Thought Catalog and a current writer at Gawker Media. Her work has been featured on ...

The third sentence you’re taught when learning another language always seems to be, “How are you?” Hello; goodbye; how are you. My name is Stephanie; I need to go to the bathroom; how are you. When I began learning Spanish in sixth grade, I was already acquainted with ¿Cómo estás?, words that floated through the hallways of my junior high and over the dinner tables of friends whose tongues were loyal to the old country, at least in front of their parents. To the parents and the hallways I’d respond “Bien,” or “Muy bien” — my limited vocabulary didn’t leave many options, not until classes began. But once that happened, I could be mal o contenta o cansada. Casi todo el tiempo, estoy triste.

As my knowledge of the language heightened, so did the expectation that I begin to detail my emotions in class. ¿Por qué estás triste? And I did not know how to say, “I think I might be depressed,” or “I’m afraid to leave this classroom because of who I might run into.” The language was becoming more difficult, but it was expanding on my feelings — giving them agency, admitting that they even existed — that was the real challenge.

I haven’t taken a Spanish class in over a decade, but there’s one thing I remember: “How are you?” is the same in any language. You avoid answering it for too long, and you eventually forget how to.

____

At the suggestion of the high school dean, my parents drive me to therapy one Friday morning. The catalyst for this session looks a little different to each of us; my dean is concerned because I’ll be spending my last months before college in summer school; my parents are fed up with the door slamming and the exploding and the unexplained distance between us, recently upgraded to ‘immeasurable.’ We correspond mostly through tears (mom), screaming (me), yelling (dad), silence (all together, now). Occasionally they’ll leave a message on a friend’s answering machine when I’ve been gone a few days, another one of our tailor-fit communication methods.

My parents believe I agreed to the session because of an ultimatum they gave me, but I actually have things I need to talk about — things I’m too ashamed and confused about to tell anyone with a familiar ear. I feel isolated in plain sight, always surrounded by people but never discussing anything important, never trusting that I can. I believe my situation is unworkable, that I can’t have a healthy and open relationship with anyone I know; I require a fresh slate, a second life, one with new players and no memories.

I mean to tell her all of this, the therapist, but instead I tell her a story — an hour-long story I hadn’t been able to tell anyone else — and before I know it the hour is gone, with it the chance to be honest about how I feel, how I am. I never see the therapist again after that, told my parents, “I don’t think I need to,” and I believed it. Sometimes all you need is for someone to listen.

_____

“Okay, for example. Say you found out that your mom is sick; your mom has terminal cancer. Suddenly, there’s this outpouring of support for you that never existed before. People are actually going out of their way to make sure you’re all right, from every direction it’s coming — it’s inescapable, the support. And initially, that’s great because all of these little interruptions, these phone calls and messages and cooked meals distract you from the terrifying reality that your mother is going to die; but at some point, it becomes not-so-great. At some point, you begin to feel as though you solely exist in the context of your mother’s illness. And it’s bad enough that this morbid inevitability is following you every second of every day, but now it’s what people refer to you as — ‘my friend whose mother is dying of cancer’ — and the things you thought about before you got the news — your crushing debt and your crumbling relationships and just… a f-cking traffic ticket you still haven’t paid — these things have taken a backseat, they are not supposed to matter anymore. No one asks about these things. No one asks how you are. It’s just “How’s your mom?” And the irony is that talking about these trivial, meaningless things is all it would take to distract you, to keep your mind off of your mom for one f-cking second, but everyone’s too afraid to ask and you’re too afraid to tell. You’re too afraid to say, ‘My job is killing me,’ without adding, ‘…and my mother is dying’ to the end of it. This is how your existence is defined, for the foreseeable future. Is there a name for that? Is there some sort of… psychological term that you know of?”

“Sounds a little like mild PTSD. Maybe Survivor’s Guilt? Not Munchausen by Proxy… hm. I mean, this feeling you’re describing, it’s pretty common.”

“So, no word for wishing someone would just ask how you’re doing.”

“Maybe just loneliness.”

_____

“I know you didn’t know how bad it was. No one did. I mean, no one asked.” My friend is explaining his addiction, how it ended (silently, privately) and I’m ashamed to admit that just hours ago I’d told him all I wanted was to be asked how I was. How people ask, but don’t expect a real answer; don’t even wait for one. And as he recalled his last few nights using, I realized I was guilty. One of them. A person who doesn’t require an honest answer. Sure, I’d asked him how he was doing, just not in a real way. Not in a way that told him he could take his time, tell me something naked. And he’d acted accordingly.

We always act accordingly when asked, “How are you?” We say, “Fine,” or “Okay,” or sometimes even, “Great,” because it’s just a formality, right? You’re just being polite, you don’t actually want to know. I’m guilty of that, too. Of pessimism, of choking out one-word answers, of making sure you get to your lunch date on time, that you’re not held captive by my benign emotions. My friend, he’s guilty too. We’re all guilty of not asking, of not telling; but mostly we’re guilty of wanting people to love us without knowing how to let them.

_____

How I am right now is this: terrified of the future. I pretend everything will work out, because recognizing the implausibility of reaching the traditional adult milestones I once believed were givens is enough to paralyze me completely. It’s overwhelming. I’m overwhelmed. I’m disappointed in myself for blaming someone I care about for my emotions when I know I’m the one who controls them, when I know it’s a privilege to be responsible for them. I’m afraid to be more honest, but I’m ready to stop hiding from myself and from people who want the best for me. I’m ready to stop pretending everything is “fine.” I’m ready to ask how you are — and not when we’re about to rush off in opposite directions, not at a loud party, not like some automated machine that spits out rhetorical questions veiled as interest. I’m ready to ask you halfway through a long conversation, in the middle of your day, when I can tell it’s all you want to hear. I’m ready to listen.

_____

How are you? TC mark

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  • Jennifer

    Maybe it’s how I was raised, but it always feels like prying when you really ask someone how they’re doing. And it always feels like oversharing when you really try to express how you’re actually feeling. No wonder mental illness is on the rise, it’s not that people have more problems, it’s just they can’t share it with the average person anymore.

  • Hannah Stephenson

    This is an interesting post. I love how the author shows how vital it is for us to be compassionate (in our actions and thoughts) and present. I absolutely agree that “How are you?” can be powerful.

    I also know it can be dangerous to be asked “how are you” by someone who DOES seem to care. I think of myself (and many others) when we are on the brink of a meltdown, and how one little kindness can push us into sudden vulnerability (it’s both good and bad, I think). I see this in my students sometimes, when I ask how they are.

    Laura Munson’s “This is Not the Story You Think It Is” talks about the need to sometimes not answer people honestly….that “fine” or “good” with no details can be ok (when we need it to be).

    This post also made me curious about the author’s story that she told her therapist…I was ready for it but it was kept away from us (clearly a conscious choice by the author). I was so interested those little gaps and dashes between the sections of your post, Stephanie….maybe that will be a future piece for you, if you haven’t written it already (I predict that you already have, in some way or another).

  • http://twitter.com/pardimate Steph Carcieri

    You are wonderful.

  • Guest

    You are hands down my favorite TC writer.

  • Phil

    Wonderful, wonderful post.

    I can relate quite a bit to your situation – it’s hard to tell people how you really feel. Society coined us in being very abstract during “small-talk”, though that doesn’t have to be like that. You don’t have to know a person for 10 years to be able to ask them how they are or to honestly tell them how you are. At least it shouldn’t be like that.

    But yeah, amazingly written.

  • Cgeragh

    so true. i think it’s also that, all right, you can talk to someone about what’s going on but what can they do to help you? it’s not that their caring words aren’t comforting. it’s just that’s sometimes they can’t change anything. so what’s the point of saying at all? 

  • rose georgia

    sometimes the last thing i wanted was to be asked how i was because i knew i would lie and i knew that lie would hurt me more because it wasn’t even another example of someone not caring that i could hurt myself with, it was me, my choice, my decision, my not telling. 

    but then sometimes it was the only thing people weren’t asking. they would say ‘so what’s going on between you?’ or ‘what happened?’. only once did a friend just turn to me out of the blue and finally say it simply and directly because she wanted to know, ‘how are you?’

    • Veronica

      Yes. This. The times I most want to be sincerely asked how I am are often the times I most dread being asked, because I don’t trust the asker to really want to know, so I’m going to feel like I have to lie and say “okay” and I will avoid passing by acquaintances in the halls just to avoid saying “okay”.

      It’s really hard to tell someone that you want to know, really want to know, how they’re doing. “How are you?” is indeed such a formality that even if you say it more sincerely, even if you straight-up say you care about the answer, it’s hard to get the askee to really believe that.

      Fantastic post, Stephanie.

  • Carli

    YES. This article is amazing. This article is inspirational. This article is NECESSARY. I completely agree that these days “how are you?” has become meaningless. We need more people to ask and actually care to hear the answer. We need more people to give a real answer. As I see it, “how are you?” has become, in essence, the same as saying “hello.” 
    Sometimes, when people ask me how I am, I give a real answer. Depending on the situation, it is sometimes a brief summary more than an outpouring of emotion. But still, I can tell sometimes people feel a little uncomfortable that I didn’t stick to the “socially acceptable” answer of “Good. How are you?” I think real, honest answers need to become more accepted and more expected.

    This issue is important. Such a small thing can make a world of difference. I don’t have many people in my life that I can honestly say are idols to me; that I want to be like. But one person that I’ve always been impressed with and found inspirational is my aunt. The reason? Because when she asks “How are you?”, she really, truly, cares and truly listens to your answer. She is not just fulfilling some social “rule” that you need to ask people how they are (even though you don’t really care). She really WANTS TO KNOW. And for that simple reason, I find her to be one of THE most inspirational and amazing people I know.

  • pineapple

    i’m ok

    • Domino

      of course you’re ok, you’re a pineapple

  • srae

    A few weeks ago I created a list: “Important qualities/traits to consider in a significant other”. You know- someone who is this, someone who is that.
    A few days ago I updated that list to say “Someone who asks “How are you?” and genuinely wants to know the answer”.

    I feel fortunate to have stumbled across this article. It makes me feel like I’m not so alone anymore.

    So, thank you for that. I think I am doing just fine now. :)

  • 4megan

    This is the best article I’ve read on this site to date. It resonated deeply with me and everything I’ve been feeling after becoming a disillusioned “adult.” I once heard this sentiment expressed by a teacher speaking to a bunch of teenagers whose whose biggest concern was what was for lunch in the cafeteria. That truth has stuck with me and and makes me try to give more of myself; however, I feel like there are the people who do ask casually, not expecting or listening to your answer, or those who will tell you every malady/misfortune that has plagued them that week without then having the courtesy to genuinely ask/listen to your plagues.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Luan-Evert/100000983916816 Luan Evert

    I have live my entire life listening to everything everyone says. Now i have learnt to listen to what they Don’t say. Cause when u ask “how are you?” , it’s what they dont say that says a WHOLE lot more than what they do.

    And isnt that Ironic…?

  • Zean

    Great post. But after the opening up, comes fatigue. A general sense of fatigue that envelops you and whoever you talked to. I’m not ready to move pass this situation, so I give you the same depressing response. But you already left, not willing to listen to this old reply.

  • kanye west

    i’m not bad. feeling kinda like an asshole. just tried to use a ruler to measure ounces in front of the doctors at work. How are you though? Hopefully you’re doing well, but if you’re not.. just remember you look like vanessa hudgens

  • http://www.facebook.com/josephbrillantes Joseph Brillantes

     ”We’re all guilty of not asking, of not telling; but mostly we’re guilty
    of wanting people to love us without knowing how to let them.”–THIS

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