Writing to a rising college sophomore who apparently got
lost in her mind-- or perhaps she just lost her mind-- during her first year at college, New York Magazine’s Ask Polly has a few pieces of good advice mixed in with her usual quota of
mental drool.
And yet, she does make one egregious error, one that I will
point out before even looking at the letter in question. See if you can see it:
If you
sounded clinically depressed to me, I would have different advice for you. But
I think your instincts are correct on that front: You’re not deeply depressed.
You’re frustrated and lonely because your circumstances at school are frustrating
and lonely.
Quite simply, depression is a clinical diagnosis. Polly is
not a clinician. She is neither a psychiatrist nor a psychologist. She has no
business offering an opinion on a matter she knows nothing about. OK, I get it,
she does the same thing nearly every time she doles out advice, but still,
getting involved in the practice of medicine when you have no qualifications is
very bad indeed. We do not want to see people avoiding treatment because an
advice columnist told them there is nothing wrong. For all I know, she might
not be depressed. It’s not for me to say. It’s not for Polly to opine. A
competent editor should have caught this.
Without further ado, here is the letter, signed Sophomore
Slump:
I was
raised by a loving, lower-middle-class family in the kind of small town that
feel-good TV shows are set in. Virtually from birth, I had a group of
disgustingly Sisterhood of the
Traveling Pants–esque friends who were more like sisters. And I was an academic
golden child, graduating first in my high-school class: the kind of kid
everyone expects to leave town and do big things. (I also fell in love with the
boy who proved to be my constant competitor for small-town success; we started
dating halfway through high school.) I loved people because the people I knew
loved me. No material comforts could have made me more content than the
knowledge that I was supported by my whole hometown.
To
everyone’s delight, I received a full ride to a university with two big, scary
sells: It was very prestigious and very far away from my home state. I
was ecstatic … until I moved in last fall and I found myself tremendously
unhappy outside of class. I spent my first few months inviting classmates to
endless lunches, hallmates to Friday frat parties, and groups to museums and
concerts. In response, I got detached rejections. When I joined various clubs,
and even a sorority, members seemed to be more interested in competing for
prized officer positions than building connections. I hadn’t dreamed of
replicating my hometown friend group, but I also hadn’t anticipated eating
every meal alone. I hadn’t anticipated going whole days without talking to
anyone, or smiling at all. Maybe people were actually competitive and unfriendly;
maybe I was randomly unlucky; maybe I was just bad at making friends because
I’d never really had to before. All I know is that I got the flu at the end of
my first semester and, bedridden, realized I had nobody to come check on me. No
new contacts in my phone. I cried for days. I was fucking lonely, and it broke
me.
After
returning from a comforting winter break, I guess I chose to feel beaten rather
than productively challenged. So I started to treat myself like a victim. I
attended my morning classes and went right back to bed. I ate approximately one
meal a day, always in the comfort of my room. I quit my part-time job and all
of my other activities. Sometimes my unfairly awesome boyfriend would take a
four-hour bus from his own college to visit me on the weekends. He would force
me to sleep at normal hours and eat real meals, dragging me out of bed to the
point that I resented him. He, my family, and my hometown friends were all
concerned about my well-being. But I felt guilty and whiny and ungrateful and
increasingly burdensome, and flaked on all their FaceTime check-ins to nap more
and stare at the ceiling.
I
essentially retreated into bed for the entire semester. I became lazy and
solitary, descriptors that had never applied to me. I only spoke when spoken
to; I straight-up stopped trying socially. My RA noticed the change and
referred me to the campus therapist, who suggested I see a psychiatrist about
clinical depression. But I was, and am, pretty sure I was only suffering from a
combination of privileged problems, “gifted-child syndrome” and homesickness
among them.
Now I’m
back home for the summer, decent grades in tow, and I’m already doing much
better emotionally. But I’m at a loss when I think about how to proceed when I
go back in the fall. My parents think I’m overreacting, that I should focus on
my classes. My boyfriend and friends think I should stick out another semester
and consider transferring out. I don’t know what I think. Most of me believes I
just gave up too easily and felt too bad for myself, that I’ll have the college
experience of my dreams if I just go back to school this fall and try harder to
form lasting connections. Another part is convinced I need to lower my
standards for relationships and chill out, and that people will come into my
life accordingly. And a small voice in my head just wants out of the fancy-name
university — but I’m almost certain that my problem stems from my own damn
expectations, and the town-size family I grew up with, just as much as it does
from my school.
As has become my habit, I will not share what Polly is
saying. It’s a pep talk coupled with another pep talk. To be fair, Polly does advise an exercise program. About that I concur.
Anyway, consider what we do not know… because, as happens
with these letters, we never have enough information. We do not know where she
comes from and where she is attending school. We do know that she was involved
with the same boy for her entire adolescence and now finds herself at a four
hour distance from him.
She might be homesick, but she might also miss a boy who has
been an integral part of her everyday life since she was an adolescent. Dare we say that said boyfriend has
been a prince… traveling hours on weekends to be with her, trying to improve
her daily life habits, being a true friend as well as a lover. We do not know how said boyfriend relates to the young men on her current campus. Do they condescend to him? Do they treat him like a friend?
As you might imagine, Polly recommends that Sophomore Slump
take more distance from said boyfriend. But folks, why remove the sole
support she really has. Besides, if the boyfriend is on campus often, perhaps the two can socialize together with her friends, and even with her sorority
sisters.
We also do not know anything about the dating culture on
campus. If the other girls are running around looking for hookups and she has a
stable steady boyfriend, she cannot really be part of a game she does not want to pursue.
BTW, did you notice that this girl, bereft and alone, did
manage to join a sorority. I do not hold myself up as an expert in sororities,
but I imagine that sorority sisters hang out together and even have meals
together. If she was welcomed into the ranks of the sisterhood, might she not
make more of an effort to be one of the girls? How can you belong to a sorority and eat all of your meals alone... unless you choose to do so.
Apparently, she thinks that they
are all superficial… but they did like her enough to invite her into their
company. Might it be—as Polly does suggest—that Sophomore Slump is somewhat
standoffish and even stuck up. After all, she was the Queen Bee at home. She is
no longer the Queen Bee.
We do not know the social origins of her sisters or her
classmates. But, we suspect that they are playing a game that she finds
unfamiliar. She seems unwilling to learn it.
Or perhaps the other girls are. We do not know from whence
she comes and we do not know anything about her personal habits, about her
appearance and personality. One understands that these things matter. Groups, even cliques, have dress codes. If one does not respect them one is excluding oneself from the group... however bubbly one's personality is. One
cannot draw too many conclusions because one does not have enough information.
Again, we note that she quit her part-time job and her other
activities. It sounds like she was punishing other people for their failure to
worship the ground she was walking on. After all, if she feels along and
isolated, what better way could there be than having a job, having colleagues
and managers, participating in activities.
Yet, she threw it all away. For all I know she
expected to be the queen of the campus and found out that she was not. Perhaps
she just misses her boyfriend and cannot stand being without him. Perhaps she has recoiled at the level of indoctrination that occurs in the classroom. Perhaps she
just needs to get over herself and to work harder at getting into campus life.
All told, we do not know.
4 comments:
Perhaps she should read this:
https://www.amazon.com/I-Am-Charlotte-Simmons-Novel/dp/0312424442/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1530124532&sr=8-1&keywords=i+am+charlotte+simmons+tom+wolfe
Frog meet smaller pond.
JH
Advice columnists don't really like people all that much. They just use them as soapboxes.
Good point... certainly this one does.
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