When I was a child, I had a phase when I thought I was
never going to die and nothing tragic would ever fall upon me. I then later
learned in psychiatric nursing that it is actually a part of a social
development. I watched gruesome news on TV about people dying and heard
stories of a relative or a family friend battling debilitating diseases but I
had not thought of those ever happening to me.
I felt extremely invincible.
You are supposed to outgrow putting yourself in a pedestal
of strength and invulnerability. In some degree, I did.
Through the years, I haven't engaged myself to romance
saved the many crushes I had from highschool and college. My romantic affairs
were fairly limited to unrequited puppy love and a series of daydreams. I did
have my heartbroken several times by crushes that never talked to me or denied
my friend requests on facebook (stalker alert). But I had always comforted
myself with the idea that the rejection was to be foreseen as they haven't known
the real me and had they been able to just give me a chance to prove myself,
they'll see beyond my curly hair and dark skin and will eventually realize that
I'm a good catch, a weirdo with her Jurassic sense of humor. But until then,
they will continue to see me superficially as my "love affairs" with
them were limited to my creepy glances and fake group messages just so I can talk to them.
I thought I was also invincible in a real heartbreak.
Then I had my first real heartbreak. Someone still broke my heart despite knowing
the real me and even after I tried to prove myself. Then another heartbreak
followed. I was confident that they have
seen beyond my curly hair and dark skin and that they have realized that I was
a good catch. I thought they were okay despite me being a weirdo showering them
with my eccentricity. But invincibility does not shield you from pain, it makes
it cut even deeper.
I learned about vulnerability in the most humane way. The
ache was too real and I slowly went down the pedestal.