Opinion COVID-19 Has Stolen My 20s - First World Problems intensify

https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/jgxqvg/covid-19-has-stolen-my-20s (archive)

COVID-19 Has Stolen My 20s

This was supposed to be a time to try new things and find out where I’m supposed to be.

By Nylah Burton
May 21 2020, 4:11pm

Before I started social distancing, I was shopping online for Transatlantic cruises. I was staying at my grandmother’s house in D.C. for awhile, and wasn’t paying rent.

A trip across the sea seemed like something I could blow my money on.

“Do it,” my grandmother said, encouragingly. Regaling me with stories of trips she and her sister took across Europe during their 20s, right before she married my grandfather, she insisted this was an essential experience.

I had just turned 25, and something like this seemed long-overdue. “It’s good for girls your age to travel.”

As I watched the coronavirus spread across Europe, and then to the United States, I started to realize that travel wouldn’t be in my future. Not for a couple months, at least.

Then, I caught a virus that seemed a lot like COVID-19, but I wasn’t sick enough to get a test to confirm, though the illness was painful enough to strike fear inside of me. Regardless of what the government said, I thought, coughing and clutching my aching stomach, I wouldn’t be going anywhere for several months, and maybe even a few years.

Everyone tells you that your 20s are this magically beautiful and tragic time. It’s when you try new things—new jobs, new loves, new friends, new cities—and sometimes fail at them, but eventually, you find where you’re supposed to be. Even if it’s back where you started.

But now, during the COVID-19 pandemic, so many people aren’t able to discover that about themselves. It’s hard to focus on trying to achieve certain goals, or having wonderful life experiences, when unfathomable numbers of the dead are being announced every day.

Every day since this crisis started, pieces of what I thought my life would look like have been floating away. I thought I’d be travelling up and down the coast to see my friends in New York and Boston. I thought I’d be going to concerts, and letting cute guys buy me drinks. I thought I’d be speaking at universities and going on reporting trips. I thought I’d be cozily nestled in a corner booth of a coffee shop somewhere, working on my first book.

But none of that is going to happen, not for a very long time. COVID-19 has stolen my 20s. Or at least, my idea of them.

Long before COVID-19, other traumas snatched away at my 20s. My mother’s abuse, followed by her cutting me off financially and refusing to let me see my father or my siblings, upended my life and sense of self. I endured two sexual assaults during college that destabilized my academic and social life, keeping me from going on study abroad programs or forging close relationships, or getting good grades. And I was diagnosed with bipolar disorder, which began the quick and easy work of ravaging my fragile brain.

As if through a veil, I watched as my friends, family, and boyfriends all met the challenge of their 20s with a fierceness. Through mist, I would see them having fun, loving their lives. I would try to reach through the veil, try to grasp at them, to feel what they felt, to go where they went. But I couldn’t.

My 20s were spent in constant turmoil.

Then, after I started healing from a suicide attempt in November while living in Denver, I felt a freedom descend upon me. For the first time in my life, I had an ideal combination of good fortune when it came to my mental health. The right medicines, the right therapists. Closure with my mother. Money to burn. No monsters peeking out of the closet.

Finally, I felt I might experience my 20s the way I thought all “normal” people in my social groups did. I felt that true happiness might be waiting for me.

In Denver, I would sometimes walk around my neighbourhood, looking at the magnificent beauty surrounding me, and I’d sob, feeling that maybe there was something beyond these mountains that would take away this despair that had haunted me for so long. I’d trace my fingers across a map, praying the names of places where I thought salvation was. New York, London, Chicago, Toronto. Big, cold cities. Cities where it seemed glamourous 20-somethings congregated to worship at the altar of youth and professional ambition.

When I went back East, to D.C. and New York on some weekends, I went to the work meetings and the brunches and the basketball games and the dinners and the plays and the day trips. They were welcome distractions, convincing me that I had managed to put together something resembling a happy life.

And then, the coronavirus whispered through the air, clung to hands, lay dormant on surfaces. It killed many who came in contact with it, while our government did— and still does—next to nothing. There are more than 90,000 people dead now, people whose lives were stolen by a virus, by government neglect.

When I first entered self-isolation, the constant stories of death left me in turmoil and fear. But so did the sense that something critical had been stolen from me, the opportunity to experience my youth as I had longed. The chance to heal from my trauma, to be happy. I was losing time, along with all the dreams I had for my future. And if some of the worst climate projections come to pass, crises like these would continue to follow me.

I despaired, and at a few points, considered taking my own life again.

But then, I realized that I wasn’t really mourning those lovely things, things that COVID-19 has shown me can all be taken away in an instant. Beneath them, I was seeking the lasting things.

I missed my career in journalism, which is tanking along with the budgets of news publications. But I realized that I got into this to help women like me, women who are mentally ill and have been abused. So, I started working towards something I’ve wanted for so long—becoming a midwife—but never did because I was scared of failure.

I longed for brunches, but realized that I was missing human connection. So I started to work on my friendships with more intentionality and depth than ever before. I wanted to travel because I wanted to feel awe, so I’m planning on going on long drives with my dad, just to marvel at nature. I revisited my dreams of living in a big city, so I’ve started mapping out a life for myself in New York or Chicago that would be my own.

My biggest realization was that I wanted to be happy because I wanted to be alive, and to live well. And so in the midst of this global crisis, I turned my head away from what I thought my 20s would be defined by and towards what it will be: Survival.

There’s nothing wrong with the things I was chasing, and I hope to one day have them back in my life. Travel. Date. Work. Rinse. Repeat. But the truth is, they were a mirage without substance. I don’t need them to be happy, because as it turns out, a constant state of happiness isn’t what I’m after. We all deserve those fleeting and delicious moments. But I’m looking for peace. Peace in my life, peace in my mind, peace in my soul. And I think I got it.

Due to COVID-19 and the ever-increasing dangers of the climate crisis, the idea of what I thought my 20s would like is dead. My life will instead be spent in survival mode. I’ll be trying to survive viruses, serving my communities, fighting a corrupt government, and preparing for natural disasters.

It should devastate me, but it doesn’t. It brings me peace. I feel strong, and somewhat ready.

-----------

Imagine being this insufferably entitled and self-absorbed.
 
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She feels victimized that her life was normal. Not particularly terrible, just normal--everybody had problems. This is what happens when people never have to work a regular job, just goof off in and after college, and then somehow get appointed a media sinecure career.

No shit she's searching for something, something really is missing in her life.
 
What a Kentucky Fried Bitch. it's been two months. Imagine watching a family member killed on national television with 3,000 other people and spending your twenties in some backwater shithole killing people who had nothing to do with it, and all you have to show for it is a drinking problem, or if you were in the Navy, a gaping wound where your penis used to be. Oh you couldn't go to the glory hole to suck off random strangers? lost generation holocaust part 2. I am genuinely surprised that she didn't find a way to work slavery into the piece.
Now, I normally like to take the piss out of the "hurr, that's just first world problems" type. It's generally retarded to bring up shithole nations when discussing the problems first world nations face. Just because we're not caught in the middle of a druglord conflict doesn't mean we don't have real problems that need addressing. It should be the goal to make the best parts of the world as good as can be. But then again... fuck this niggerkike.
 
Damn. Is THAT what I'm supposed to do with my 20's?
I guess I'm wasting mine trying to set up a career so I can properly support a family. Turns out I SHOULD have been partying abroad all this time. Welp, learn from your mistakes I guess...

If it makes you feel any better, I spent my 20s trying to set up a career only to blow my money on dumb shit like buying a house. So yeah, I fucked up my 20s as well.
 
I have bipolar disorder. Fashion is my lifeline.
I first learned of both mental illness and glamour from my great-aunt Mae-Jane, who thought the Lord and his angels spoke to her through visions.
Mae-Jane took a particular pride in her appearance. Every day, she’d adorn herself in DIY regalia: velvet gowns, elbow-length lace gloves, golden turbans, veils covered with glitter. She always smelled of something biblical, like a woody perfumed oil.
During funerals, Mae-Jane paired her outfits with performances. At my maternal grandfather’s homegoing, she flung herself all over the chapel, screeching in tongues. As my 8-months-pregnant mother lunged toward Mae-Jane — seemingly to strike her — my great-aunt danced away, flapping her arms to reveal angel wings she had sewn to her gown.
Severe mental illness runs deep in my family, and we’ve learned to joke about it, but mostly we’ve learned to deny its presence and potency. Despite being mentally ill for most of my life, I used to pride myself on being “different” from Mae-Jane or my other family members.
Even when I started hearing voices and having paranoid delusions, even when my manic and depressive episodes led to several doctors firmly diagnosing me with bipolar disorder, even then, I denied the bond we shared.
But now, after my public suicide attempts late last year, I’m identifying with Mae-Jane in an unexpected way — through my clothes. Granted, my fashion choices are more subtle than hers, but I’m understanding how and why Mae-Jane built a sartorial armor to protect herself from the world. I see that it granted a measure of precious autonomy over not only her own body and mind, but over other people’s reactions to her.
I can only guess what Mae-Jane hoped to gain from her fashion choices, but I know she claimed small victories by determining how the world saw her. She commanded attention, dared us to question her reality and expressed her feelings through her style.
Fashion is powerful. Studies have shown fashion can lift or dampen our moods. In some ways, it can mean the difference between employment and unemployment, romance or solitude, and — especially relevant for those deemed to be “mad” — forced hospitalization or getting to go home. In “The Collected Schizophrenias,” a book of essays by Esmé Weijun Wang, she writes about her experience with Cotard’s delusion, a type of psychosis where the patient believes they are dead. At one point, she describes deciding what to wear to her electroconvulsive therapy consult.
“If I looked too pulled-together for the consult, I figured, I wouldn’t be able to convey that most of the time I was suffering from psychic torture. If I looked like a mess, I might end up institutionalized, and I’d had enough experience with psychiatric hospitals to know that I didn’t want or need hospitalization.”
After my suicide attempts, I knew my worth was being weighed and found wanting. I felt naked, knowing people had glimpsed the most vulnerable parts of my broken brain. I knew many people would think I did it for attention (or love). I knew many people would think I was dangerous (or toxic). I knew many people would pity me (or mock me). I knew they would take the information they were given about me and translate my pain and experiences into something that fit their narrative of what and who I was.
[ Suicides are at an all time high. We need hope more than ever.]
So, I took a page out of Mae-Jane’s book and went shopping. I curated my new clothes carefully, considering the message that each piece sent — not only to the world, but to myself.
I reclaimed my sexual viability and emotional strength through fierce, grunge pieces with low cuts and tight fits. In a society dominated by merit-based competition, I felt the need to assert my occupational identity — accomplished writer — so I picked professorial pieces with plaid.
I know that as a Black woman with a severe mental illness, one of my only avenues to societal acceptance is accessing this aesthetic of intellect and artistry, so I hunted for pieces that were daring, unique and textured. (In this, I am merely a repetition of history. In “This Way Madness Lies: The Asylum and Beyond,” Mike Jay writes that in the 15th century, melancholia — what we might now describe as some mix of depression, delusion, and paranoia — was “a fashionable condition for brooding intellectuals.”)
I picked black and deep-green colors, often reaching for the darkest swipe of red lipstick I could find. I wanted to look exquisite if I could, but I also wanted to cling to some sort of defiant madness, a madness that communicated a challenge: I know what I am, do you?
It was a more elegant form of my rebellious adolescence, when I frequented Hot Topic, the store writer John Paul Brammer describes as the place where angsty teens across America went to proclaim, “I will mold myself into a prickly, jagged being with spikes and chains to sabotage the machine — I won’t let you process me, let you look me over and determine my worth. I choose instead to self-destruct.”

Appearance amounts to more than clothing. I have also become highly invested in my skin care and hair routines.
In the days after my first suicide attempt and leading up to my second, I laid in bed wearing a snot and tear-covered T-shirt, hair tangled and shedding, skin blotchy and eyes swollen. Then, I was deposited into the psych ward, which can be a simultaneously sterile and filthy experience. I felt tainted, unworthy, inhuman.
So in the months after I got home, I went to the steam room at my gym and deep-conditioned my hair. I took biotin obsessively. I bought bath bombs and eye creams. I wanted to be clean, smooth. No roughness. I exfoliated and moisturized and serumed myself back into a person I could recognize.
I’ve fought to maintain this routine during pandemic-imposed isolation. Being shuttered in my room for 25 days has brought suicidal ideation roaring back, making my shelter-in-place behavior feel more like the domain of the mad each day. In the absence of the need for elaborate outfits, skin care is one of the few things reassuring me that I’m not in the asylum, that I’m relatively safe and relatively free.
In “I’m Telling The Truth But I’m Lying,” writer Bassey Ikpi, who also has bipolar disorder, writes of a similar feeling, although she speaks of being dissociated from herself at the same time. “She starts with the dark circles under her eyes,” Ikpi writes. “Her makeup bag holds the witchcraft that will hopefully make her look human again.”
When I pamper and dress myself, I do so to heal, but I never know if I’m performing alchemy or resurrection. I never know if I’m creating an illusion or revealing what was there all along. In a world salivating at the chance to judge me, consume me, conceal me or punish me, how could I ever really know? Is this my true self, or just the self that I think will protect me from you?


This lady is nuts and I fully support her “journalism career”
 
Now, I normally like to take the piss out of the "hurr, that's just first world problems" type. It's generally exceptional to bring up shithole nations when discussing the problems first world nations face. Just because we're not caught in the middle of a druglord conflict doesn't mean we don't have real problems that need addressing. It should be the goal to make the best parts of the world as good as can be. But then again... fuck this niggerkike.


I was talking about the Global War on Terror, not the Mostly Global War on Drugs, but I see the point. People are breaking down mentally in the comfort of their own homes after a few weeks, just being in jail would kill these people. No backbones. The NEET lifestyle is for hardcore motherfuckers only.
 
Before I started social distancing, I was shopping online for Transatlantic cruises. I was staying at my grandmother’s house in D.C. for awhile, and wasn’t paying rent.

A trip across the sea seemed like something I could blow my money on.

“Do it,” my grandmother said, encouragingly. Regaling me with stories of trips she and her sister took across Europe during their 20s, right before she married my grandfather, she insisted this was an essential experience.

I had just turned 25, and something like this seemed long-overdue. “It’s good for girls your age to travel.”

...man, that sounds nice. I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t jealous. I could barely afford eyeliner at 25, much less a cruise.

Every day since this crisis started, pieces of what I thought my life would look like have been floating away. I thought I’d be travelling up and down the coast to see my friends in New York and Boston. I thought I’d be going to concerts, and letting cute guys buy me drinks. I thought I’d be speaking at universities and going on reporting trips. I thought I’d be cozily nestled in a corner booth of a coffee shop somewhere, working on my first book.

But none of that is going to happen, not for a very long time. COVID-19 has stolen my 20s. Or at least, my idea of them.

That’s a lot of shit you’re supposed to be doing in 4-5 years...but some of that you could be doing now. Why can’t you work on your book or do liveIt’s only been a few months, calm down, Mary.

Long before COVID-19, other traumas snatched away at my 20s. My mother’s abuse, followed by her cutting me off financially and refusing to let me see my father or my siblings, upended my life and sense of self.

....uuuhhhh. You can’t just say something like that without context. Also what does this have tobdo

I endured two sexual assaults during college that destabilized my academic and social life, keeping me from going on study abroad programs or forging close relationships, or getting good grades. And I was diagnosed with bipolar disorder, which began the quick and easy work of ravaging my fragile brain.

That’s very sad but what does that have to do with the Commie Cough?

When I first entered self-isolation, the constant stories of death left me in turmoil and fear. But so did the sense that something critical had been stolen from me, the opportunity to experience my youth as I had longed. The chance to heal from my trauma, to be happy. I was losing time, along with all the dreams I had for my future. And if some of the worst climate projections come to pass, crises like these would continue to follow me.

I despaired, and at a few points, considered taking my own life again.

...Hoe, you aren’t the only person with problems. You get the luxury of not paying rent, but I know people who went into panicked froths about rent until that stimulus check came in—People with kids and families. I have nurse friends who watched beloved patients die and fought back tears until they got home.

You didn’t get to go on a cruise...what audacity you have madam. Oh and 10 points for dropping in climate change as an after thought...that didn’t feel

My biggest realization was that I wanted to be happy because I wanted to be alive, and to live well. And so in the midst of this global crisis, I turned my head away from what I thought my 20s would be defined by and towards what it will be: Survival.

I hope this article is not a good example of your writing because holy shit this pacing is inconsistent and this narrative fucking disjointed.

I’ll be trying to survive viruses, serving my communities, fighting a corrupt government, and preparing for natural disasters.

This woman thinks she’s going to come out of her grandma’s house and the world is going to look like Fallout 4. Like..she needs this to be so much more dramatic than reality allows it to be.

Ffs...also I’m going to see if she wrote anything about her mom cutting her off from the family. That sounds like a more interesting read

[EDIT] oh she got drunk-raped and her mom Catholic guilted her, but she found Judaism and it’s ok now
 
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Honestly, I feel bad for her not because IT STOLE [HER] TWENTIES, but she clearly is suffering from a victim complex and emotional instability, two things that work hard against stable emotional health and security, the former exaserbating the later. She has had some good success in the past year, but she is still on a long journey of establishing a sense of personal normalacy. Times like this she should be leaning into her hobbies hard, establishing good routines like excercising (routines are great for all mental health patients especially bipolar), and taking as much comfort in her support group as she can. The road to better mental health isnt always about living what you THINK is normal, but making the best out of any and all hands dealt to you by life, golden or shit.

Covid is like 5% of her overall problems. This is just Covid derangement syndrome, if such a thing exist.
 
I was talking about the Global War on Terror, not the Mostly Global War on Drugs, but I see the point. People are breaking down mentally in the comfort of their own homes after a few weeks, just being in jail would kill these people. No backbones. The NEET lifestyle is for hardcore motherfuckers only.
I was talking about the global state of things being fucked up everywhere but the first world. Whether it's drugs or terror doesn't matter.
We all already know that shit's fucked up in the lower 70% of the world. But that's not the upper 30%'s problem. There comes a time and a place to discuss how shitty most of the world is. Discussion about how we can make the good parts of the world better is not one of those times.
 
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I endured two sexual assaults during college that destabilized my academic and social life, keeping me from going on study abroad programs or forging close relationships, or getting good grades
Why is the most important part tagged on at the end like an after thought? I thought Americans put a college education above all else for their young?
I was diagnosed with bipolar disorder, which began the quick and easy work of ravaging my fragile brain.
So it did nothing to you until after it was 'diagnosed'? Pretty sure people who actually have BPD get fucked by it, then it is diagnosed.
Finally, I felt I might experience my 20s the way I thought all “normal” people in my social groups did. I felt that true happiness might be waiting for me.
Your social group travel to Europe, go to loads of concerts and travel the States? Wonder which socioeconomic class you're in then.
I thought I’d be going to concerts, and letting cute guys buy me drinks
And then claiming you were sexually assaulted when they tried to kiss you because you spent the night hanging off their arm.
 
I usually -jokingly- call Journalist bloggers, but this is an unironic personal blog disguised as an article.

Traveling as a "lifestyle", is gay in it's current consumerist form. You just go on a Disneyland style "It's a small world" ride prebaked experience, you eat the few select foods and stay in a hotel. Woah. It's not like you can do the same being at home while not wasting your life and money away on something only the social media is pressuring you to do. All that matters is the fancy pictures you can post on instagram -or the privacy negating service of your choice- and flex on the other spoiled unhappy women how closer you are to a Sex in the city character.

whew
 
I was talking about the global state of things being fucked up everywhere but the first world. Whether it's drugs or terror doesn't matter.
We all already know that shit's fucked up in the lower 70% of the world. But that's not the upper 30%'s problem. There comes a time and a place to discuss how shitty most of the world is. Discussion about how we can make the good parts of the world better is not one of those times.


I'm not discussing how bad the third world is, I'm saying that she's a faggot for acting like spending two months watching netflix is hell on Earth and ruined a decade of her life, when for much of human history, your twenties were spent being maimed or killed on a foreign battlefield. I'm not saying one is better than the other, but perspective is needed. If I could turn back the clock, I know which one I would choose.
 
That’s very sad but what does that have to do with the Commie Cough?

These people take intersectionalism to an incredible degree, anything bad happening to them, anything at ALL is linked to every OTHER bad thing that ever happened to them. Because they've been trained to seek victimhood to the point that things they should be over by now, or at least coming to a better grip with like childhood abuse or the loss of a pet years ago, can be brought to the fore, rehashed for fresh suffering and fresh asspats, if they can be tied to getting cut off in traffic or just happening to exist in history at the same time as a pandemic..... then they can be the most abused person at the coffee shop today, and the envy of all their friends.

Suffering to this kind of person is a transcendent experience.
 

As a Black Jewish woman and a writer who works in all-white spaces, I’ve experienced multiple racist incidents — some of them public and life-threatening — that have greatly increased my anxiety. A couple of weeks ago, at the age of 25, I went to a cardiologist for the first time in my life. I had been experiencing intense chest pain, numbness in my limbs, eye-twitching, and lightheadedness. After a round of tests, my doctor informed me that I was most likely experiencing chronic anxiety and panic attacks, but that I had gotten so accustomed to being in a heightened state of fear, that I no longer felt the panic, just the pain. He also said that due to this, I had slightly increased levels of inflammation. This terrified me, when I considered the studies that show how chronic anxiety is linked to a greater risk for heart disease, a condition my grandfather died from.
 
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