Your Problems Aren’t Real Problems.
“Not another sad white boy” she lobbed this across the table when I said I’d made a friend at the museum. Two of the women I had joined for lunch chuckled with her.
It’s true, babes. I collect sad white boys because I collect sad humans. (Mostly other creatives.) Sentimental and sensitive with suitcases full of whimsy.
One such friend, D, was a delightful, short, red-headed theatre geek. In university, we’d sneak popcorn into the basement of the library and watch old episodes of Buffy. He fireman-carried me across campus to get hot chocolate when I was feeling low. I’d read books in the back of the theatre among the costumes while waiting for his practices to end.
I went to the play he produced and acted in a year after graduation. Then, we gradually lost touch. No hard feelings. No big blowouts. Just faded out of each other’s orbit.
We weren’t what people imagined when they thought of mental illness, but both of us wrestled with depression . One conversation we had is ingrained in my brain when we realized that we had both been told “You’re not supposed to be depressed.” I’ve heard his response, “my problems aren’t real problems” echoed from multiple male chests over the years.