When Did Everything Change?

Apr. 27, 2012
I write and edit Thought Catalog. I'm a brat. Send me fun things at ryan@thoughtcatalog.com

There was a time not too long ago when hurting yourself felt good. Back then though, it was called something different. It wasn’t about inflicting pain, it was about feeling something, anything, that was different than what you already knew. I’m talking here about the newness of things. I’m talking about moments that could shock your entire body and leave you feeling high for days. Baby faces doing grown up things. Little hearts filling themselves up with experiences. There was always a story at the end of it all and it didn’t usually end in tears. That, like everything else, would of course soon change.

It’s hard to discern when the change happened though; it’s hard to tell when you became incapable of shaking things off like you once did, when you stopped believing the promises of a shirtless boy in a dark bedroom, when a fight with a best friend turned into years of a steady and slow dissolve. All you know is that it happened. Don’t know how. Don’t know when. But here you are: hurting yourself for different reasons. Here you are hurting yourself and it actually starting to feel like pain. The lows aren’t so dramatic. There’s no screaming, no yelling, no visible anger. Instead they just creep under your skin and stay there, chipping away at your resolve. The permanence terrifies you. The permanence is proof that you can no longer afford to be silent when it comes to running your life.

You would’ve done anything to go back. Go back to the first boy, the first friend, the first drink. Feel it all around you. Feel it go inside of you. You figured this would make you happier. Because the problem here is the cruelty of time. You’re sure of it. Not a doubt in your mind. You blame moving to different cities, long-term relationships, and busy schedules. They’re the issue. They’re the things that are making you miserable and taking everything and everyone away from you. Right?

Pop quiz! Why doesn’t getting drunk feel the same? Why does having sex make you feel even more alienated? How come you aren’t getting what you want when you did everything that was asked of you?

How come.

You’re asking the wrong questions. You know that, right? No? Okay, well why don’t you go further down until you realize it? Why don’t you hurt yourself some more until you realize you actually want to feel good?

Look, I don’t blame you for not wanting to ask the right questions. There’s a certain kind of peace that comes with willful ignorance. There’s a certain kind of thrill you get from rejecting the things that make you happy. Because once you start asking them, once you make that choice to better yourself, being bad will never feel as good. Being bad will just feel like you’re delaying the inevitable.

When did everything change? You wonder this as if knowing the answer will make everything better. It won’t. Growing up is difficult — you have to mourn the newness and accept being old enough to know better — but it’s what you have to do in order to keep living. Because there’s only so long you can keep asking the wrong questions and expect to find a good answer at the end of it. There’s only so long you can check out of your life before it starts to belong to someone else. Something else. TC mark

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  • guest

    goodness most of your posts are so depressing, i hope you have a therapist 

    • guest

      you’ll actually find that one of the tenets of cognitive behavioural therapy – as administered by a therapist, which ironically is what you suggest finding – is writing down one’s thoughts and feelings… which can be quite cathartic.. don’t you think? :)

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Gayatri-Sekar/771330153 Gayatri Sekar

    This is amazing 

  • Summer

     ”Why doesn’t getting drunk feeling the same? Why does having sex make you feel even more alienated? How come you aren’t getting what you want when you did everything that was asked of you?”I’ve been wondering exactly these three things for the last three months. FML.

  • http://twitter.com/philosolaktor Lakshitha

    I can’t express how much I can relate to this. This and Gotye saying “you can get addicted to a certain kind of sadness”, you just expect nothing to change.

  • http://twoseconds.tumblr.com/ Jesse Vaughan

    “There’s a certain kind of peace that comes with willful ignorance.”

    Truth.

  • Diana

    boom ryan o’conn does it again. another amazing one!

  • Jae

    I couldn’t have expressed myself in any better way than this. thank you

  • Peach

    So sad. And so true. And so relatable. 

  • http://www.facebook.com/avskk Sara Krafft

    God, what a gut-punch.

  • JT

    Are you a cancer?

  • Anonymous

    HOW COME

  • Mac

    Ryan, I love this article.

  • Grace

    I emailed this to a friend with the caption “this as close as anyone else could describe what I’m feeling.” Pretty sure I’ve reread it four times and it is still amazing.

  • Jose

    this is a vague, abstract and slightly piece. It’s like trying to climb up a slab of marble, there is nothing to grab or dig in to. You should be a songwriter. 

  • http://www.facebook.com/timbolinjr Tim Bolin

    Truth. with a capitol ‘T’

  • Mamajamerson

    There’s so much raw truth in this piece. I felt like a younger version of me rose up and spoke as I read, and it’s kind of nice to communicate with this other self. Thank you for that.

  • http://twitter.com/PatrishCee patreeeesh

    You’ve officially put me in a state of panic and paranoia. I will be looking for these signals and symptoms in every corner of my life.

    Besides that, I still love you!!

  • Anonymous

    you talk about a best friend that you drifted away from in a lot of your articles. it must have really marked you.

    • http://www.facebook.com/emily.mancer Emily Mancer

      there are certain friendships that really do ‘mark’ you because they’re so intense. Losing that person/drifting away from them triggers a whole bundle of emotions – sadness, nostalgia, regret, anger (especially in the beginning). these are the type of friendships that never end up evolving into a comfortable friendly acquaintances/brunch once a month relationship. communication is severed – and when you run into each other, it’s awkward and painful and messy all over again. these friendships do exist and when they end, it’s pretty much the equivalent of a break-up. i don’t want to sound presumptuous, as if i know exactly what ryan’s experience was, but everything he writes about friends drifting apart and friendships crumbling really resonates me. things fell apart between me and my best friend a couple of years ago – she was the person closest to me in my whole life, we spent half our waking hours together and, because i was going through a difficult period with depression and anorexia, i depended on her so much because she genuinely understood me and we had such trust in each other. losing her was one of the hardest things i’ve ever gone through – and it certainly has marked me deeply. anyway, bit of an essay here so sorry about that….i just think ryan’s articles on friendship are amazing (translates to ‘pleaseee write more!!’

  • http://twitter.com/rockegan Rachel Helen

    Ryan, I can’t get enough of your posts. Thank you for sharing the thoughts I don’t know how to put into words.

  • http://twitter.com/MrTyYu Taylor Yu (@MrTyYu)

    Thanks for this. Dealing with a lot of these ideas, feelings as well.

    I miss the days when things were black and white.

    Most of the time these days, it feels like the greys just keep getting greyer…

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