Get some therapy!
As
a kid I always wanted to do two things go to a therapist and confession. Both sounded equally fun. On TV, kids at the therapist’s office always
got cool toys and if you were lucky they would give you this silly doll with
fur in strange places. All the
rich kids I knew went to therapy and made it sound like having a good friend
(in my head similar to an older sibling) to talk to. As an only child, that sounded amazing. Besides therapy, I was always memorized
by the idea of confession. Therapy
interested me because I have always been fascinated with how the it works and
confession because as a Jew it always interested me. Go into a booth tell a man all of your problems, say a
couple hail marries and call it a day.
I love that idea! Jews, our
guilt is a different kind. We
carry a sack of problems or guilt until it gets so heavy that we explode on
someone cause it’s the Jewish way.
It’s an art really. My
grandmother once yelled at our server for making the food too spicy at the
buffet even though the item he was referring to was “Cajun shrimp.” There was a label above the shrimp with
three little red chilies but that didn’t matter to grandma. While server took the time to explain
that Cajun meant spicy to my Russian grandmother she proceeded to lose her
shit. My grandfather joined in on
the shouting and instantly turned the Sizzler
into World War II. He made the
server, her manager and busses all cry for doing him wrong and then sold them
copies of his book about his life as a Holocaust survivor.
The
one time I was in therapy as a kid was a free one at my public school in the 2nd
grade. My parents had officially
divorced and I was seven. For an
hour a day, twice a week for a few months kids from newly divorced families would
meet with the public school therapist-lady and talk about divorce. The therapist had frizzy-dyed blonde
hair and would constantly remind us that our parents divorces weren’t our
faults. Some of the kids would
cry. She would make us draw
pictures of our families and say our parents loved us. Most of the kids drew their mom, dad,
sister, dog and other boring stuff.
I would draw my TV. I would
just stare at the kids waiting for these sessions to end. After a few months of it, I asked my
mom to pull me out of the school therapy.
I didn’t understand why anyone could think their parent’s divorce had
anything to do with them. At the
time I thought of my parent’s divorce as, I’m glad my parents handled their
shit cause their arguing was getting in the way of my Golden Girls watching.
My main worry as a child was being unnoticed, ignored or blending into
the wall.
It was during the
beginning of my senior years of college, around the time that I was still just friends
with Elijah but not with him that I started therapy. I found out that there was a therapist I could see for free
for up to 6 sessions on campus. Being
the poor college student I was sold at FREE. There was a period of time for about five months where I
Elijah confided in me about his HIV status mostly because I was once of his
only friends in San Francisco.
This was also because I was there when he got really sick with flu-like
symptoms while no one else was. He
made me keep his situation a secret.
At first it seemed easy. He
also mentioned that since we have fooled around a few times over the year, that
I should also get tested. While I
had already found out I was HIV negative within 2 days of his diagnoses (I took
a blood test fast than you could say “make it a double”), he swore me to
secrecy about his status. Friends
would ask me why Elijah was out of school. I would say it was because he found a sugar daddy that
forbade him to complete college.
Truthfully Elijah was learning how to become a walking medical lab with
as many prescriptions drugs he could get his big hands on. After my test, the nurse said that even
though I was negative that it could take months to show in my system if I in
fact had contracted HIV. While I
knew deep down in the place where my soul should be that I was negative it was
still a hard thing to carry silently.
I would have to leave the coffee shop early to take Elijah to the
hospital for his appointments. I
would sometimes choose to leave class early to drive him to the doctor’s. It was the secrecy of the whole thing
that really got to me. I
remember my mom calling me around this time, asking how things were and I told
her that Elijah was great and that I was okay. Being the Jewish mother she is, her spidey senses went up
and she told me to tell her what was wrong. I lied and kept lying about the situation for months because
that’s what Elijah asked me to do.
It got to the point where I didn’t know what to do with my angst a
keeping all my emotions on the HIV front quiet so I figured therapy may be a
good thing to try. Once I started
my therapy session it soon came apparent why they were free.
I
got to her cubicle and she asked me to call her Dr. Lailani. She was wearing a Phish t-shirt, had
long black hair and smelled of patchouli.
She also had a touch of black armpit hair that I could see leaking out
of her short sleeves. This aspect put
me on edge. That should have been
the first red flag. She seemed nice
enough. Very much the San
Francisco person we have all seen on TV.
I think it weird that she went by her first name. Anyone that goes by doctor and then
their first name is too hippy dippy for my taste but may be therapy will change
that. I’m too cynical to take her seriously. My first issue is that she seems
very happy and chipper. I don’t
trust anyone who is happy all the time because as my LA has-been actress
teacher once said, I could “smell the acting.” First thing she asks me is if I was named after Dr.
Zhevago. I quickly get defensive
and explain that Yuri is a very common Russian name and was not invented by
that movie. If I could get a penny
for every time get asked that question, I’d be rich enough not to need free
therapy. Then she asks me about
coming out. She kept asking about
how my parent’s divorce sculpted my coming out process when I couldn’t
understand the relevance. For the
next 4 sessions she focuses on the topic of coming out even though I didn’t
feel the need. I got annoyed
because for me coming out wasn’t that big of a deal. I told my mom I was gay at twenty years old. She cried onto my shoulder, dried her
tears and then asked me if I was seeing anyone Jewish. She then asked me to fix her hair a bit
and we went to dinner. That’s
it. I live in San Francisco. My family did not disown me or anything
like that. It would take my
parents years to understand my gayness but they tried to be supportive with the
tools they had. I told Lailani
this and she stuck to the topic way longer than needed. It was like watching the movie Titanic,
at least two-hours too long (our sessions were 45 minutes). Since it was November, at this point,
she asked me if I was sad not going home for the holidays for “CHHHHannukaaaah.” She spent like 30 seconds doing the hmmmm
noise. I told her that it wasn’t a
major Jewish holiday and I didn’t really care. She looked at me as though I had single-handedly killed baby
Jesus or something. It was the
same look many teen girls must have had when they realized George Michael was
as gay as the day is something. I
then explained to her that while Chanukah is a Jewish holiday, it is a minor
one that does not have the importance that Christmas does to Christians and
those who have a tree just because it’s pretty. She then asked me about the 8 days of gifts. I then told her that I didn’t get that;
it was an exaggerated thing to compete with Christmas. She then asked me why I couldn’t have
the holiday spirit and always have to be a bummer. I then asked her realize that natural deodorant has never
worked, to purchase anti-perspiring, to stop talking and left.
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