I know you didn’t think I could
hear you whisper. I know what the college years are like and I know that you
were trying to impress each other. I know that you didn’t know how badly you
could hurt a total stranger. When you said those words to each other, I knew
they were about me.
“Look
at her looking at workout gear. I bet she doesn’t even know what a gym is!”
This
was over 3 years and 50 pounds ago, but my face still heats with shame when I
think about it. I turned to look at you after you said it, and you realized that
I was 20 years older than you thought I was from behind. I’m sure you thought I
was someone’s mom shopping for my daughter then.
What
you didn’t know is that I was shopping for myself. What you didn’t know is that
I took the leap off a cliff and returned to college in my late 30s to finish my
Bachelor’s Degree. What you didn’t know is that I sat in my car for 20 minutes
in the parking lot every day, working up the courage to sit in the classroom
with you and your peers. You didn’t know that my marriage was crumbling and I
didn’t know how to stop it. You didn’t know that my 3 year old son refused to
potty train so that I would have to run to school and change his pants since
the Catholic school he went to couldn’t do it for him. What you didn’t know is
that I was feeling so lost and alone I was stress eating all the time. And you
definitely didn’t know that I was looking at the sweatpants because the jeans I
wore to class that day had gotten so tight they were giving me a rash around my
waistband and I just needed some relief. You didn’t know that I spent my last
$20 until payday to get that relief.
You
chose to judge me and make my already shattered self-esteem shatter even more.
You encouraged me to withdraw from my life even more than I already had. You
crushed me just as I was trying to build myself up again. You broke what little
strength I was still holding on to during the darkest time of my (much longer
than your) life..
Despite
the cruel words you tossed away like nothing, I showed up at that school every
day for 4 semesters until I graduated. I survived my marriage ending, and even
got my son potty trained before Winter Break. I made the Dean’s List at 37
years old and graduated with my BA at 38. And then, I lost 50 pounds and no
longer fit into those sweatpants that I bought that day.
I
still wear them around the house when I’m cleaning it, and on cold nights I
sleep in them. I have to tie the waistband shut to keep them on now, but I love
them because they are well-made and have big pockets. They have our school name
written down the side in pink letters. I know you didn’t think I could hear you
whisper, but every time I put them on I hear you again, only now, I think about
how far I’ve come since that day and realize that woman you shamed no longer
exists. How much sooner might that have happened if you’d just bought your
books and passed me by?
Before you say those words you
think no one else will hear, think about how you’d feel if they were said to
you. When you overhear those words not meant for you, remember they only see
part of the picture. Have we gotten so comfortable sitting behind our screens
all day that we have forgotten these are real people we encounter in our lives that
have thoughts and feelings and problems of their own? Dear college boys in the school
bookstore: I hope your lives are easier than my last few years have been, but
if you face difficult times I hope that you cross paths with people who build
you up and show you that you are more than your current crappy situation. I
think we owe each other that humanity.

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