Oh,
crap. You know when a blogger writes “part 1” as part of his post
title, he's seriously going off on one. He's been thinking too much
and writing too much, and now he's finished some hideously convoluted
attempt at self-expression with little or no consideration for his
readers' enjoyment. And he wants to share it with you. Yes, this
document DOES weigh in at over 3300 words IN FULL, and yes, I tried
to write shorter, separate posts. But, like life, which this blog
post is all about, it didn't work out the way I wanted it to.
Rest
assured, though, I'm not going to feed you the whole cake at once.
Let's nibble on it one slice at a time. Either way, as Eminem would
put it, I need to be “gettin' this stress that's been eatin' me
recently off of this chest and I rest again peacefully
(peacefully)...”
It
may sound like “bitter self-berating” and “being a big-headed
cock” are poles apart from each other, but believe me: one can draw
a fine line between the two. Between putting yourself down and
showing off what you've got, there's a balance- one that most people
find quite easily and naturally, allowing them to be happy with who
they are, without annoying those around them.
One
of the things I struggle with is finding that balance. That's why I'm
going to come across as a complete twat in this blog post. Don't say
I didn't warn you.
1993.
Secondary
school. I've moved from a 100-pupil primary to a 1200-strong
comprehensive secondary. I've had short-term memory difficulties all
my life, and now that I have to learn 200 people's names and the
location of 20 rooms in an un-signposted building, I've got a lot on
my plate- and that's before I start the actual school work. The
pressure piles on. I become a confused, overwhelmed, erratic- and
largely depressed- twat. Adding to this, I have a form tutor who
thinks that the right way to assist pupils with their difficulties is
to humiliate them in front of the group. Unfortunately for me and
everyone else with leaning difficulties in the school, she was in
charge of special needs. For legal reasons I will call her Mrs G. I
won't name her, but I will name the Blue Coat School in Oldham.
Instead of helping me, she destroys me. From this point, I grow up
genuinely believing that I am a moron.
Here
are a few examples of her behaviour:
- Numerous times, she tells me I am stupid infront of the class.
- The school has a habit of pestering parents for extra money to pay for refurbishment for the school. They ask us to sell tat like keyrings or bookmarks. If we don't come back with either the merchandise or the money (ideally the money- you are grilled on how hard you'd tried if you bring the shit back), we are in deep shit. I, of course, forget (I had something called “homework” that took priority). Mrs G asks me if I had also forgotten to put my underwear on. She asks me this in front of the whole fucking class. She tells me that if I don't bring this money in, I am going to have to prove it. I am 11 years old. I believe her totally.
- She fequently takes my dinner hour away from me to make me find out pointless pieces of information. When I have to bring a deposit in for my Duke of Edinburgh award, she wants to know “what it is”. As I don't know, I spend my lunch hour trying to find out, reading in dictionaries and asking other people on the D of E scheme. They don't know either. I eventually find out how financial deposits work. And I NEVER forget.
- In the first week of school, when I forget to turn up to afternoon registration, she tells the rest of the group to tell me that I am in trouble. When I go to see her, she goes fucking ballistic at me. I nearly shit myself, seriously.
- I am allocated extra time during exams, which was a minor bonus, not that I can remember many of the answers anyway. The downside is, I have to sit them in Mrs G's room. In an English exam, we are told that the first ten minutes we were to read the questions but not pick up our pens til we were told to. I, of course, forget this and start writing after two minutes or something. She marches over to my table, snatches the pen out of my hand, slams it on the table and screeches at me.
My
behaviour becomes more erratic as the homework piles up. I start to
resemble the deranged love child of Hannibal Lecter and Roger Rabbit.
These bizarre behavioural outbursts- unsurprisingly- annoy the
majority of the pupils in the school, and I am outcast. Outcast
because, summarily, I was a twat.
The
abuse worsens. Girls criticise me, not because of my behaviour but
because of my looks. On a daily basis for five years, I'm generally
told that no-one will ever find me attractive. In a situation like
this, it doesn't take long before you totally believe it. If a girl
does show an interest, it's a joke at my expense. Because I'm a twat,
I fall for it every time.
1998.
Whilst
drowning in a sea of coursework, my twin cousins turn 18. I go to
their party at a restaurant. It's my first night off coursework in
months. I keep myself to myself, as I don't have any news for my
relatives at this point. All I do with my life is coursework. I'm sat
with my parents. My cousins and their friends are all chatting away
like pretty regular 17-18-year-olds. At some point their banter lulls
and all that can be heard from them is the odd hushed giggle. When I
look up to their end of the table, they're looking at me. They all
quickly look away, smiling.
For
fuck's sake, I think. I can't go anywhere without girls giving me
shit. I've done nothing to deserve this.
Later
that year, I visit my headteacher with my mother. We explain that my
memory difficulties are preventing me from succeeding with the work.
My mother and I suggest dropping one subject to ease the workload.
The head's stance is that GCSEs are difficult for everyone. He asks
what makes me different, but it's a rhetorical question. The
psychological assessment proving memory difficulties don't count for
shit in his book.
We
try again with the deputy head, who takes the same stance, making my
mother cry. He begrudgingly allows me to continue as normal without
doing geography homework. As I wasn't doing homework for this subject
anyway, this doesn't change a great deal. I'm forced to sit all ten
GCSEs. My only C-grade is English- the one you can't revise for.
(Grade C or above are the only ones employers care about.)
Okay.
So. In short, secondary school was dogshit. I develop a plethora of
problems and they stay with me for a long time. But let's see how
things change.
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