A constant reminder of my outcast status
During the first school week in first grade, my teacher gave all the students an assignment: draw a self portrait. She gave us each a sheet of paper and a box of crayons and told us to get started. Even looking back on it now, that's a pretty daunting task for a 6 year old. And to add to the pressure, she told us she was going to hang all of the drawings on the wall. She said she'd place our name under our picture to help the students remember each others' names. That means it should be at least somewhat of a realistic portrayal.
I didn't even know where to start. Should I draw a profile? A full body head-to-toe picture? I looked around the room, trying not to look like I was cheating (not that that's even possible for a self portrait). It seemed like the other kids were sticking to mug shot style drawings. Most of the kids around me had started by drawing a big oval. I followed their lead and pulled out the black crayon.
I drew sort of an egg shape on the sheet of paper, then added to circles for eyes and a big semicircle for a smile. Not a bad start really. By this point I was feeling pretty confident. My picture wasn't awful. The border of the egg shape was nice and smooth, and the eye circles were perfectly round. I was moving right along now.
I decided I had to give my picture some characteristics that would let the other kids know it was me - some uniqueness. I have blond hair and blue eyes. Easy. I added some yellow lines for hair and a couple of small blue circles for my eye color. Not bad. But it felt like something was missing. The picture had the bright areas of yellow and blue, but mostly it was black lines on a white background.
Ahh yes! Skin tone. I wanted to fill in the face with some skin color, so I scanned the crayon box for something appropriate. Nothing. No "flesh" or "tan" colors. I was using the classic Crayola 8 pack.
I mulled over the decision for a few minutes then decided to go with the closest color I could find. I pulled out the orange crayon and started filling in one cheek. It looked kinda weird, but maybe that's because I had only filled in a small section. I moved on to the other side of the face, then the nose area, then the chin. Soon, my entire face was filled with bright orange. It looked terrible, but I could only assume that all the other kids had the same problem. In that moment, I remember thinking the black kids in class were lucky that Crayola included "brown" in the 8 pack.
The teacher started wandering around the room, collecting everyone's drawings. As she lifted up each sheet, I started to notice that some of the other kids left their faces white. They didn't bother to color it in. I thought maybe they were lazy or slow. I pitied them.
The teacher finished collecting the papers and then hung them up on the wall one by one. She started on the top left corner of one wall, and put them all in a row from left to right across the top of the entire wall. As she tacked up each picture, I began to realize that it wasn't just a handful of slackers who forgot to fill in their skin color - it was everyone. Even the black kids left their faces white.
She hung up maybe 15 pictures before she got to mine. And as each picture was revealed, my actual face turned redder and redder with my growing embarrassment. By the time she got to mine, it felt like my skin was on fire. I was sweating. Then she got to my picture. It would have been more realistic if I had used red instead of orange.
Of course all the other kids laughed when they saw it. And who could blame them. This is probably the first life event I can remember where I felt truly different. All I wanted in the world was to be like all the other kids. My orange face remained on the wall for weeks, surrounded by all those white faces, a constant reminder of my outcast status.
One of Life’s Defining Moments
Everyone has those childhood events that seem to change their life forever - the stories that still give you the douche chills when you think back about them. My story ends with me covered in vomit.
This story starts in seventh grade. We were bussed from the burbs out to the projects in downtown Tampa for school. The bus ride was like 45 minutes each way. And when I say the projects, I'm not exaggerating. The school was in the very center of a low income housing complex. One of my best friends at school was a drug dealer named Star. He sold joints and Now & Laters on campus.
I'm totally getting off track - but remind me later to tell you about the time I got knocked the fuck out by a ghetto ruffian while I stood outside the school building waiting for first period.
I was a skate rat back then. A skinny skater fag with long blond hair in my face and retarded black pants with skulls printed all over them. I think I thought I looked cool and maybe even tough. Nope. I was a fucking mess.
Anyway, I remember the entire day, because it's burned into my memory like a near death experience. I won't bore you with extraneous details. But I will tell you what I ate. My mom used to buy these frozen glazed donuts. You'd pop a couple of them into the microwave and they'd be all warm and soft. I think I ate two of them for breakfast that day.
By lunchtime, my stomach was cramping up. I thought for sure I was just hungry. You know the feeling. It's that pre-flu weakness where you're all cold and hot at the same time. Sweaty with the chills. I get a similar feeling sometimes when I haven't eaten in a really long time. So I thought I was hungry - I couldn't wait for lunch.
I sat down with my friends and housed a PB&J and a big bag of white seedless grapes. Dude I'm telling you this is so fucked up. That was almost twenty years ago and I still remember what I ate for lunch.
So the afternoon went on and I began feeling even worse. The food didn't help me. But I figured I could hang on until I got home. It would have been silly to have one of my parents drive 45 minutes out to the hood to pick me up when school was almost over anyway. So I fucking got on the bus like an dumbass.
I sat down next to a window about halfway toward the back of the bus. Wearing my stupid skull print skater pants and a hoodie. About 30 minutes into the ride home I could feel the saliva start to flood my mouth. You know the feeling. I'm telling you right now, if you have a weak stomach stop reading.
I kept swallowing it down, that saliva flow. I was conscious of the situation. Stop after stop, kids would hop off the bus. And I was counting down the minutes till we got to my subdivision. I knew it was only a matter of time before I could go inside my own house and puke in the toilet like a normal human being.
So I swallowed. And swallowed. I began to think that if a little puke came up I could just swallow that too. We were almost to my stop.
There were maybe another 15 kids on the bus when I reached my breaking point. I would have yelled out for the driver to pull over. I would have opened the window at least to puke out of it. But it was too late. It was coming up - and it was coming up fast.
Like a fucking fire hose, a half digested combination of donuts and peanut butter and grapes and juice splashed into my stupid skull pants. I tried to hold out the front of my hoodie to catch it so it wouldn't flow down the floor of the bus into the other rows. That was just wave one. Then another wave and another. I had no control whatsoever. The vomit kept flowing.
Kids all around me jumped up and ran toward the front and back of the bus screaming. The driver didn't know what was going on. Maybe she thought it was a fight or something. But no - that evening, she was going to be cleaning puke off the floor of her only means of income.
When the puke fest ended, we were only a minute from my house. The driver didn't even realize what had happened until we stopped at my street. I trudged off the bus, dripping puke everywhere. I was soaked from my chest down to my knees in thick odorous sludge.
When I got home, I dumped my clothes into the washing machine, took a shower, and crawled into bed. I didn't go back to school for two weeks. Sure I had the flu. That was a valid reason for the first week. The second week - that was pure embarrassment. I wondered if home schooling were an option.
By the time I made it back to school, no one said anything. No one made fun of me. I guess some other drama came up in the meantime. Maybe there was a fight at school while I was home sick. Or maybe someone got arrested for selling weed. Who knows what kind of shit went down while I was away. At least in my friends' minds, my little drama was forgotten. But I know I'll never forget it.
P.S. If you want to share your fucked up story from childhood, email it to me and I'll post it for you (anonymously if you prefer). I'm thechurning AT gmail DAWT com. Or just add it as a comment.
P.P.S. Can you believe it's been two whole fucking years since Puke Week?!?!
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