It will be your nineteenth birthday
tomorrow, and you’ve never felt so young. You start to wonder if everyone feels
this way as they grow up, or if this is just another thing which sets you
apart. You miss being young. Then you realize how ridiculous that thought is.
Because you are young. You are
really, really young.
You can’t even drink yet – legally.
You think about the night last fall when you tried to pass as older, with your
falsified I.D, but were caught because you looked so young – because you are so young. And that’s not even you
projecting, that’s the outright, honest-to-goodness reason you were caught.
I
saw the girl with the scarf buying PBR’s. There’s no way she’s any older than
eighteen.
You immediately regret having
bought so many. Only one of the four you’re charged with buying had even been
yours. One for you; one for the boy with whom you had danced; two for the boy
who would eventually hear more of your secret thoughts than most other people
ever had, even though you weren’t and still aren’t sure why he was the one you
entrusted them to.
You sit at the bar and fill out the
required paperwork. The alcohol which is still coursing through your body makes
it difficult to think straight, to answer the questions directed at you. It’s
too difficult to focus, to not get distracted by the disjointed conversations
occurring all around you.
Katherine
with a “K”, not a “C”.
Do
I really have to stay inside? Can I at least go outside and tell my boyfriend
that it’s okay if he wants to leave?
I
can’t stop crying, it’s not my fault, I’m trying, I’m trying. I’m sorry.
I
didn’t even want to come out tonight, I wish I hadn’t.
You finish the paperwork, but of
course you aren’t yet free. All of your friends are though. And they’ve all
already left. And why shouldn’t they have? Nothing is still going on, unless
you’re one of the unlucky ones to have been caught. As you are. You sit down on
the ledge next to the fire place with a sigh.
Everyone
who’s still inside is going to have to come to the station.
You sigh again. You don’t even have
anyone to be angry with; this is so clearly and indisputably your fault. You
allow your hands to be handcuffed behind your back, with your purse awkwardly
hanging on your wrist. You look down as you are led to the patrol car. You
aren’t drunk enough to escape your own self-consciousness. Because you are self-conscious, as much you pretend
that you aren’t. And that applies to everything, not just to this.
You arrive at the station, and your
handcuffs are switched to just one hand, and connected to a metal loop on a
bench. You pull your knees into your chest, and suddenly you can’t control your
laughter.
What’s
so funny!?
It’s
just, like wow, this doesn’t seem real, you know? Like, I just got arrested, we
all just got arrested. Is this even real life?
Believe
me, I don’t want to be here anymore than you kids do.
I
think I’ll write a story about this.
All
of you creative types at this school.
The officer shakes his head and
sighs.
I’m
really sorry you kids have to go through this.
It’s
not like we can really complain, like this is clearly our fault.
The officer begins to call out the
names of you and your temporary peers from the stack of confiscated I.D.’s. You
hear your name.
That’s
me.
Do
you have any noticeable scars or tattoos?
I
have a treble clef behind my ear, and-
You pause, to breathe, in an
attempt to suppress your nearly irrepressible laughter.
-
An
inverted cross on my hip.
Really!?
Yep.
You’re
the man.
Thanks.
Your small group begins to be split
up, as you are all led away at different times to be fingerprinted and have
your mug shots taken. You realize with a slight pang that you will never be
able to escape this; New York State will always know your face, your
fingerprints, and your eighteen-year-old mistakes. You realize that you will
never be able to be a teacher, a cop, or a politician, not that that’s
something you even ever really wanted. You ask the officer to print your mug
shot out for you, because, well, why not? You’re told that they don’t do that,
even if you beg. You ask if you can see it anyway. The second officer enters as
the screen is turned towards your scrutinizing eye. He laughs and shakes his
head.
Teenage
girls. You need to make sure you look good?
Well,
of course!! And since I can’t have a copy for myself, it’s really the least you
can do.
You realize how slightly manic you
look, how messy your hair is. It is four
in the morning after all, and you haven’t been able to even properly sleep off
your drunk. But altogether, it’s not that bad. You’re glad that this is the
image the state will have of you, and resolve that you won’t give them the
chance to take another. One mug shot is enough.
You are told that taxis have been
arranged to take all of you back to campus. You’re handed a green slip of
paper, with your court date and all of the appropriate information. You’re told
that if you miss court, for any reason, it’s grounds for a warrant to be
released for your arrest. You make sure to mentally take note of the date,
while also vowing not to lose the slip of paper either. Today, you wish you had
kept that vow to yourself. A byproduct of a different eighteen-year-old
mistake.
Today is the day for you to look
back on your eighteen-year-old mistakes. It’s your last day of a year of fake
and feigned adulthood, of failures, of constantly questioning yourself, of
falling in and out of lust and what you think could be love, but definitely
isn’t, of worrying that you’re making the wrong long-term decisions in the
grand scheme of your life, or something.
People always say that nineteen is
meaningless, but you’re not sure if you agree. While it’s not as obviously
meaningful as eighteen or twenty-one, it is meaningful in its own special way.
For one thing, it symbolizes that the messiest year of your life is about to be
over, that you survived your first year of fake adulthood without (too many)
visible scars. There will only be two more years of this, this feigned and fake
adulthood. Maybe more if you go to graduate school. But you don’t think you
want to. You’re already sick of fake adulthood, already itching and ready to
grow into real adulthood, real responsibility, and all of the realness that
will go along with that. You hope it won’t hurt too much. But you know that it
will.