Sunday, February 3, 2013

A Little Bit of History Repeating






There's nothing more cliché than an innocent, wide-eyed, starstruck eighteen year old moving to Manhattan after graduating from high school. She thinks that she's a Charlotte, she has a playlist of “city” songs on her iPod, and constantly updates a list of cupcakeries she's been meaning to try. She stumbles upon movie sets, takes a bunch of pictures, brags about it on Facebook, and thinks that it means more than it really does. She expects it all to make her happy, as if she is devoid of any responsibility. As if New York City were some mythical creature able to heal all maladies and put you on the right path in life. Like all you have to do is show up and you will have it all figured out.

So it happens when she least expects it to. When she's too busy playing the role she thinks she needs to play. She's paying so much attention to what she wears to class, what she writes in her papers, and what she says to her parents when they call, that it washes over her, waking her up and subduing her at the same time. She's overcome with the sense that she's made a huge mistake.

New York City may not have magical healing powers but that doesn't mean it's not capable of detecting shifts in confidence. As soon as she begins to doubt herself and question the decisions she's made that have led her to the city of her dreams, Manhattan reaches into its depths and attempts to throw her up, like she's not worth it anymore. And she takes this as her cue that she's not strong enough to withstand everything that gets thrown her way. Instead of fighting to prove her worth, she rolls over and blames everyone else for her failure.

***

New York City kicked my ass when I was eighteen years old. The streets which had once seemed so full of opportunity quickly seemed devoid of any meaning. I felt pulled between feeling too empty and feeling too full, struggling for privacy and worried that I was all alone. I wish I knew that I was just growing up. That the aimlessness was to be expected. But I thought I was way beyond all of that. I was mature for my age goddammit.

Men cat-called on the street, I sat in the closet crying on the phone, everyone posted “I love college!!” on Facebook, and I felt so far away from my friends from boarding school. I felt guilty being in New York and moving on with my life. It didn't feel like something I wanted to move on from. That's one of the things they don't tell you about graduating from high school and entering the world for the first time: it means you're closing the book on something. And you can never re-open it, no matter how hard you try. Ready or not, the future awaits.

I wasn't ready to let go. I wasn't willing to close the book on high school, so I straddled it as I tried to open my new book, my epic New York City tale that was just waiting to be written. But this was exhausting, and it changed me in ways that I didn't expect and I still don't fully understand.

I don't know if it was New York that rejected me or if I rejected New York. I took as much as I could from the city, as if my frantic grasping would lead to me procuring a big enough chunk that would make everything worth it. But as I kept reaching for something that wasn't there, New York decided to start pulling me apart, taking things from me that I didn't even know I had.

It was like I was engaged in a fistfight with the magical creature, as if I needed someone or something to blame my unhappiness and confusion on. New York wasn't innocent in it all, but neither was I. It changed me faster than I anticipated, and in different ways than I was ready for. I decided that I needed to run, I needed to breathe, I needed to leave. Not even indie movies, red velvet, and Gossip Girl could keep me still.

I wish someone told me then what I know now. As I was struggling with the picture in my head of how it was supposed to be, I was losing control over it all. As I was stuck straddling my dusty, epic high school tome and this new and stiff New York anthology, I was forced to make a decision. I attempted to shift towards the future, the exciting and limitless New York, but I hesitated just a little too long in my decision and it ended up slamming shut. Instead of shifting all my weight to New York and letting my past slam shut, I put too much care into my decision to move on from the place that showed me true happiness. I felt like I'd be betraying it if I didn't let it close gently.

But there I was, left with two closed books and one dead end, and I had no idea how to move forward. New York City couldn't put me on the right path in life or treat the heartbreak I was feeling. It didn't know how to and it wasn't its responsibility to. For the first time it was up to me to decide whether I was ready to grow up. And New York City won.

***

It's three years later. Armed with both the burdens and the joys of my past and my hope for the future, I'm one week into the first semester of my senior year. I'm putting on my boxing gloves, fueled by the wild range of emotions I've experienced this last year, and I'm ready for a rematch. I'm a student at NYU again. What. The. Fuck.

There's a quote that says “insanity is doing the same thing over and over again but expecting different results.” Its origin has long been contested, but it's been bouncing around in my brain for the last month or so, pinning me down when I least expect it to and taunting me when I let a sliver of doubt enter my mind. After some careful rumination, I've come to the conclusion that this quote is bullshit.

Now, don't get me wrong, I'm sure some people take inspiration from this very blunt statement. I mean, it's often traced back to Narcotics Anonymous texts, so whatever helps people I guess. But I'm offended by the assumption that doing the same thing over and over leads to the same outcome. If that were the case we wouldn't be living in a world of Elvis, Michael Jordan, Mickey Mouse, electricity, and Harry Potter. Theodor Seuss Geisel (Dr. Seuss to all you green eggs and ham connoisseurs) submitted the manuscript for his first book, And To Think I Saw It On Mulberry Street, to 27 publishing houses and received 27 rejections. All it took was one person to recognize the awesomeness of the Seuss, and BAM. Everything changed.

Sure, it can be argued that inventors like Edison and the Wright Brothers weren't doing the same thing over and over again, but in fact tweaking their ideas in order to achieve their ultimate successes, but I think my argument still applies. They were persistent, they had faith in something or someone, and they held on for that little bit of luck or fate or whatever you want to call it. They were hopeful that things would eventually align for them and that they were doing what they needed to do, so they kept going.

Lately I've wondered if I am in fact insane for making the same moves over and over again. Here I am going back to the place that originally derailed me, a place where I struggled with questions of identity, grappled with my past, and reconfigured what I wanted and needed from my future. But as I attempt to shake off the doubt and the worries that inevitably creep in, I am reminded that we, as people, are constantly changing. Every time I make a decision, big or small, I am a different person. What brought me to NYU at eighteen years old is completely different from what brings me to NYU now, at twenty-two. With a little faith, a lot of determination, and a positive attitude, who says I won't get a different result?