empty of thought
I learned to ignore a lot of things. That’s what my parents told me to do when I was being teased or bullied at school. “Just ignore them.” So I would. “You’re smarter than them, they aren’t worth your time.” Probably true, but I didn’t like being made to feel like I was a fool for reacting to their taunts, jibes, horrible acts. Was I supposed to be of tempered steel, hard and impervious?
I became that way with time. That which does not kill us makes us stronger, as the cliché goes. Consciously, I decided to be stronger, and I changed in ways that my conscious mind did not notice.
I learned to ignore a lot of things.
The word “irrational” is not one I would use to describe myself, and “delusional” is certainly not something that I, a normal, high-functioning person, could possibly be. I ignore that possibility. I find it hard to think about, in fact.
If I am honest for a moment, if I listen to the part of myself at the forefront of my mind, then I can say with certainty that I am delusional. Perhaps even psychotic, even as I continue to be high functioning and normal.
I wonder what else I’m ignoring. What else I’m not thinking about.