Good Grades & Mystery Games: Chapter 31
Good Grades & Mystery Games (North University Series Book 2)
Iâve put off going to therapy for so many reasons.
I always thought that my problems were never big enough to receive professional help. There are people with real struggles and Iâm just a girl with a slightly dysfunctional family and a need to always do her best. Voicing my fears out loud as well as someone trying to help me navigate it just felt like I was burdening them with my issues. I know itâs their job, but I canât help but think Iâm taking away space from people who truly need it.
Since Gioâs death, Iâve been trying my best to be strong. I need to move on and continue with my life. I know what grief does to people. I know how it holds people back from their potential and I donât want that to happen to me. I already showed too much weakness towards Evan, so I cleaned up my act, put on a decent outfit and I went back to school. People talk. They always have. Before, the looks I got were either disgust or jealousy and now its pity.
My family is also trying to move on. When I went to visit them, no one spoke about it and they put their best faces on, acting as if nothing happened. I donât know which is worse: talking about it or ignoring it. The latter makes me feel less lonely though.
My mom forwarded us all an email of a list of therapists in and around the area. The twins arenât bothered about going, Hen says heâs considering it, but I actually took the leap. If Iâm not going to talk to my friends, the least I can do is talk to a professional. What I wasnât expecting was for her to see right through me.
Iâve been sitting in Dr. Nelsonâs minimalist office for almost half an hour, and sheâs already managed to figure me out. Sometimes, I feel like I donât even know myself and the perception I have is simply based on how other people think of me. Itâs fucked up and it doesnât even make sense because I do know myself. I have to, right? I know how I present myself, but what I canât figure out for the life of me is why. Which is one of the first questions Dr. Nelson asks me.
âWhy do you think nobody likes you?â she asks. She reminds me of one of my old high school teachers. She has short light brown hair, owl-framed glasses and is wearing a grey romper. She seemed like the best choice because sheâs young and doesnât make me feel like Iâm talking to a professional even though she is one.
I shift in the extremely comfortable seat across from her. âI never said that.â
She shakes her head lightly, glancing down to the notebook in her hand. I had to fill out a questionnaire before arriving, so she already knows what happened and how Iâm feeling on a scale of ânot greatâ to âfantastic.â I noted down somewhere closer to ânot great.â
âNo, but youâre thinking about it, right?â
I chuckle a little, brushing my hair that has fallen in front of my eyes out of my face. âI donât see what that has to do with anything. Iâm here for grief counselling.â
âYes, but that also requires me to get to know you, too,â she explains. I resist the urge to roll my eyes. Sheâs just doing her job. âCan you talk to me about why you feel like you donât have many friends other than the ones you live with? You wrote down that high school was particularly difficult. Do you think you could reflect on that time?â
I take a deep breath, trying my best to go back to that time. That part of my life stays with the other suppressed memories of my childhood, locked away in the deepest corners of my brain in a chest labelled âDo not open.â I try not to think about it most of the time because I know that Iâve grown since then.
âIâve always been confident. Well, I thought I was. I mean, I had to be. I had an image to uphold. I couldnât embarrass my family and even though my parents dismissed my achievements, it only made me want to work harder. It paid off. I passed every test with flying colours, and I even became valedictorian by the end of high school, but still, nobody wanted to be my friend other than Wren and Kennedy. My brothers teased me about it, saying that itâs because I tried too hard at school and people thought I was stuck-up. But I just didnât get it. There were so many people who could be pretty, smart, and popular, but just not me.
âEveryone would make groups that I wouldnât be a part of. Theyâd plan times to hang out in the bathrooms and no one would invite me. Theyâd have parties and I would never go. I tried to rationalise it, believing that people were just jealous. It wasnât until junior year until I finally plucked up the courage to ask someone in my Spanish class what was so wrong with me. âWe just donât like you. Your vibe is just off,â she said. They just didnât like me. What the fuck does that even mean? They just had one look at me and decided they didnât want to get to know me. And because it was high school, word got around fast, and everyone collectively decided they didnât want me.â
I take a deep breath, my hands shaking.
âI thought things started to turn around senior year. Everyone wanted to party, and no one was taking anything seriously. I made the stupid decision to host a party, hoping people would come and when they heard how big my house was and the amount of food I was bringing, they did. Suddenly everyone was interested in me and because I was stupid and I got high off being needed and somebody choosing me, I made friends with the wrong people. I got used for my car, my house, my money, my fame. People would make up any excuse to hang out with me and I let them. For a few months, it was bliss. I was trying hard to fit in and it paid off. Then, when one of the biggest parties of that year got busted by the cops for underage drinking at a party I didnât host, I got blamed for it. Still, that short period where we hung out, I sort of miss it.â
Dr. Nelson watches me for a second, processing the word vomit. She writes something down in her notebook before looking back up at me. âDo you miss it because they chose you?â I nod, tears fighting my eyes not to fall. âWhy do you think thatâs so important to you?â
âBecause no one has chosen me just for me before,â I admit. Oh, shit. Iâm going to cry right now. Itâs my first session and Iâm already about to bawl like a baby. Yet, I donât want to stop talking. It feels too freeing. As if talking about it will take the pain away. âAt the time, it felt like people were starting to really like me. Before I could even understand it, people have always taken one look at my family and their achievements and based me off that. I never got the chance to show my true talents or figure things out on my own. I thought that they started to realise I wasnât as bad as everyone made me out to be and that they wanted me. Looking back, I know it was stupid because they didnât want me. They just wanted what I could give them.â
âDo you think you still do that now â allowing people in because youâd prefer that they want something from you than nothing at all?â
I shake my head, wiping the tears with the back of my sweatshirt. âNo, Iâve stopped doing that. I realised that what I need is people to like me for who I am and if they donât â if they want more â then I donât need them.â
âHow do you manage relationships and friendships with this fear?â
âI donât think itâs a fear. Iâm not scared of it happening again because I wonât let it.â
âHow do you ensure that doesnât happen? Iâm curious about your process, Scarlett.â
âI just donât let people get too close romantically. Thatâs where it hurts the most,â I say easily. Itâs the most natural response and the one thatâs the truest. This isnât an interrogation, but for some reason, it feels like it. Sheâs just trying to get to know me, but itâs so hard to explain that to her when I donât even know who that is sometimes.
âDo you not think that limits you from gaining something possibly great?â
I shrug. âMaybe. Iâd rather have nobody and deal with solitude than have people who are destined to break my heart.â
She nods, writing down in her notebook. I take the opportunity to take a real deep breath and allow the weight of the world to be off my shoulders for one minute.
âAnd now, as you deal with losing your uncle, are you still shutting people out or are you allowing anyone in?â she asks. âYou said you werenât alone when he passed. Iâm assuming you still talk to that person.â
Just the mention of that day, the way Evan held me and cared for me makes me cry even more. He was just there. She holds the box of tissues towards me, and I grab them.
âGod, Iâm so fucking embarrassed,â I mutter, wiping my eyes and my face. She doesnât say anything, but she smiles softly. âYes, I still talk to him, but not about what happened. Itâs hard to talk about it.â
âThatâs understandable. Itâs not something you exactly want to remember and thatâs okay. Dealing with it and moving on is just as important,â she says gently. âDo you mind me asking what you talk about instead?â
I shrug, tilting my head up to the ceiling so I can stop the tears from falling. âHe helps me forget. He distracts me and I donât know if heâs doing it on purpose, but he doesnât push me to talk about it,â I say, remembering the way he taught me how to play piano. How he let us sit in silence when I didnât want to talk.
âAnd does that help?â
âWith Evan itâs justâ¦He listens to me. Even if we have a complicated relationship right now, he still manages to care and itâs beyond me why. I havenât given him any reason to. We werenât the kindest to each other for a while and then we talked, and I donât knowâ¦I misjudged him. I think weâre similar in that way,â I explain. âMaybe if people got to know me more, theyâd actually like me despite my money and my family. But Iâm constantly putting up this barrier, terrified of rejection.â
âAnd you think Evan likes you for more than that?â
âI mean, he has to, right? Iâve put him through some real shit for the last few years and I know heâs probably scarred from witnessing what happened to Gio. And God, I feel like such a hypocrite,â I say when the realisation hits me, and I bark out a disbelieving laugh. âI just said that whole thing about people judging me and deciding they donât like me, and I did the same thing to him. Iâve got to know him over the last few weeks and heâsâ¦Heâs probably one of the kindest people I know. He listens to me, he takes care of me, even when I donât want him to. Itâs not about him choosing me for me because in some way, I donât think that would matter with him. Even if we had a rocky start, all heâs done since then is make me feel like Iâm capable of more than I give myself credit for. Heâs gotten to know me, and he hasnât run away yet.â
Dr. Nelson smiles as more tears run down my face. I rub at my cheeks, sighing as the realisation that I might, actually, definitely like Evan Branson washes over me. âHe seems like a good friend. Why do you think you care so much about being liked, Scarlett?â
I laugh. âI donât care.â
âYou do care, Scarlett and thatâs okay,â she presses. Sheâs not going to let this go.
âItâs so easy to say that you donât care about what people think of you, but the truth of the matter is, you do. Everybody does. Because peopleâs perception is what makes you, you. You can try to be a good person, and someone will think youâre trying too hard or youâre not trying hard enough. You can try and showcase your intelligence and youâll get put down for it. So, really, even when I try to be my authentic self, I canât ever find it because Iâm still, subconsciously, trying to please others.â
âDonât you think it would be freeing if you let go of that?â she asks curiously.
âPeople donât need a reason not to like me and they just donât and that sucks, okay? Even before everything that happened with the party, people had one look at me, and they realised they donât like me. One person I could deal with. Maybe Iâm just not their vibe, but when itâs everybody, Iâm starting to wonder if maybe Iâm the problem. Maybe I need to be the one to change because nobody else will. I thought I was just a hard person to love. I tried to change, and it didnât get me anywhere. But I donât want to do that anymore because I love myself and I justâ¦I justâ¦â
âWant to fit in and be accepted,â Dr Nelson says, finishing my train of thought. I nod. âItâs all anybody wants.â
âI want to stop feeling this way. I really do. I never used to think about what happened or what people think of me until Gio died and suddenly Iâm questioning everything, my loneliness included. I just want to be happy again, but itâs only been two weeks,â I say.
I want to move on. Not because Iâm cruel and that I didnât care about my uncle, but because I have so many goals and aspirations that I canât achieve if Iâm stuck in my head. I donât enjoy being down and feeling helpless. I like being a fun friend. I like laughing and having a good time, but I feel so guilty about doing that when Iâve just lost one of my closest family members.
âGrief and happiness can coexist. You donât have to feel guilty for wanting to be happy right now. Nobody chooses to sit in grief, it just happens and thatâs okay,â she says gently, as if reading my mind. The way she talks to me makes me believe her. She tells me things and for some reason, I believe theyâre true. âYou can be more than one thing, Scarlett. You can be brave as well as being scared. You can be confident and have insecurities. You can be rude or mean, but you can also be kind and selfless and loving. Really, you can be anything you want.â
I laugh a little. âAre you sure youâre not just saying that because itâs your job to talk me out of jumping off a cliff?â
Dr. Nelson laughs too, nudging her glasses further up her nose. âNo, Iâm not just saying that. Youâre a smart girl, Scarlett and youâre feeling a lot of things right now. The best advice I can give you until our next session is to feel those feelings. Donât push them away because theyâll creep up on you and come crashing down when you least expect it.â
I do my best to take in what she says, to let it truly settle with me. It turns out that Iâve had this warped perception of therapy for so many years. I knew I had shit to figure out but saying it aloud really showcased just how deep those worries go.
As I leave the office, I make a promise to myself, the same thing Iâve been trying to tell my friends for years, but never thought of applying to myself.
Iâm not going to downplay my feelings. If I feel something, Iâm going to do just that; feel it. Ignoring it just leads to breakdowns in therapistâs offices on your first sessions and I really donât want to do that again.