Sunday 10 February 2019

Friends.

Friend is a weighty word for me right now, and it seems to be everywhere.

Friend, used by people I don't consider a friend, or consider more than a friend.

Friend, in terms of seeing posts about my friend's other friends but being excluded.

Friend, like, "Can we just be friends?"

Friends, as in the Cameron Philip song. (Go check him out, he's God-tier.)


***

For me, suffering with BPD and having friends is like walking through a landmine. I never know when I'll step on the wrong thing and everything will blow up. Throughout my life I've "picked and honed" as my household knows it. This means that in any given situation, I'll find someone, mold my entire life around them, get a little too over in my head, before ultimately having my heart broken by friendship. There have been four main people this has happened with and all four of them destroyed me at some point because I didn't have the ability to step back. Little did I know that this has been a BPD thing all my life. At each stage in my life I've found my favourite person without realising until it was too late to stop being toxic. A branch off BPD is a thing called "Chameleon", where you fashion yourself off your favourite person. It takes a lot, a lot of mental space, tears, and self-hatred to wrench yourself away from this habit, which is something I've been through many, many times. It's a toxic dynamic but it's one I've never seemed to be able to lose, hence why most of my friendships are short-lived. And the ones that somehow last for years turn out to be simple, distant, and healthy.

So what does a friend mean to me?

In the past two years, a fear called agoraphobia has taken root in me. It's the fear of leaving my house, thinking the worst things ever will happen and I won't have a quick escape plan. It's taken away 90% of my social life, restricted me concerning a working life, as well as put the breaks on any potential dating life. It's a terrible thing and even happy memories make me angry and upset because they're not happy anymore, they're reminders that I'm not anything like the person who used to go out, attend concerts, get a bus to college without any second thoughts. I had this amazing best friend Elle, who was there for me through thick and thin, who saw the darkest parts of me and never made fun, or laughed, or scorned. We used to meet up every weekend, I'd skip the occasional college class in favour of hanging out with her. Out of all my friendships, ours was the most affected when my agoraphobia took root. This led to the friendship breaking down; not because Elle turned me away. No, I turned myself away, unable to endure the guilt that came with me knowing I was constantly cancelling plans and crying alone in my room. All fun and games.

Recently, I've had the opportunity to reconnect with her; I've had the opportunity to reconnect with a lot of friends in an attempt to repair what my agoraphobic self has damaged. This morning, I continued reading Justine Winan's manuscript, and there's a paragraph that says, "all friends are good. As long as they care about you, it doesn’t matter if you see them twice a day or twice a year." And that hit me massively because not even once a year do I see my best friend who lives a twenty minute drive from me. A friend merely five minutes over the road from me is someone I see maybe once/twice a month. But they've stayed, for whatever reason, they have stayed. I've been given this complex that nothing is worth anything if it doesn't happen outside my house. So I always turned bitter when I wondered why my friends would settle for a virtual persona of me. I've struggled with writing being enough to say I've been busy because it doesn't require me going outside.

Friends are the people who stay, no matter how hard the times can get. Friends will know you, and if they truly know you, they'll believe in you and be proud of any inch of effort you make. They'll recognise how much you try, no matter how small that trying is. Friends might not always think to include you, knowing it could be too much that you'll decline again, but they see and they know. They love and care.

And whether you see them every week or not even once a year, a friend can always be there.

Wednesday 6 February 2019

Book of the Month - January



Title: One Of Us is Lying
Author: Karen M. McManus
Rating: 5*


Firstly, January was a great month for reading! I read four books and have already uploaded blog posts for two of them. My January book is ONE OF US IS LYING, a Breakfast Club inspired novel where four students are thrown into the whirlwind mystery of a boy's death.

When Addie, Nate, Cooper, and Bronwyn are the last to see classmate Simon alive in detention, they all become murder suspects. Each with secrets of their own that Simon planned on revealing, they all have contemplative motives. Under questioning by police whilst dealing with their own ruining lives, the four find their lives irreversibly changed by one boy on the biggest revenge trip of high school stories. The murder investigation shakes each of their worlds, pulling them apart, only to knit them back together again with new lives and ambitions.

With each page, this book has you guessing a new suspect. Weaving attraction, secrets, betrayal and social hierarchy into one intricately thought out story, McManus' book has people guessing the suspect before they're revealed, before changing their minds. This book turned me into some sort of distant Sherlock, texting out detailed theories for each new person it could have been to my friend, who'd previously read this book. I'm sure she watched with amused content as I scrambled for the answer and the how.

This book was an entirely new kind of read for me. Usually I can't take to mystery. I can be an impatient reader so to have something lengthy and guessing for that entire time sounded sure to irritate me. What I found was myself being pleasantly surprised. ONE OF US IS LYING has so many plot twists--and what you find out in the end is that, really, they're all lying. To each other, to themselves, to their parents, and not everything is about Simon.

Given from each students' POV, this book offers all sides of the investigation--and the devastation that follows when wrongly questioned for a crime and having every secret held closely unravelled so calculatingly. This book is quite possibly for fans of GOODBYE PERFECT, (in terms of thinking you know people well but you actually don't and police playing a massive part in the puzzle) and, well, those who liked the dynamic of THE BREAKFAST CLUB in terms of character profiles.