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Hello Wonderful Readers,
I felt a lot of resistance writing this piece. Iâm very tired right now. Most of you reading this are not in high school, and any of my younger cousins or friends who might be are probably just scrolling on TikTok. You can see how my inner critic is already working against me! Thatâs why itâs important to me to challenge myself. Iâm determined to write and publish this piece for you anyway.
Iâm stealing the idea of this list from Austin Kleon, who stole it from Debbie Millman. I listened to his story about it on Millmanâs podcast this week. Here, Iâve cobbled together ten things I wish I had known when I was graduating from high school. That year was 2013, and a lot has changed since then. Instagram existed at the time, but it wasnât widely used. This was years before TikTok, when the first major sex scandal about Jimmy Savile came out, and Oscar Pistorius, the South African sprinter, had just murdered his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp.
I was finishing up my A-Levels at my incredibly fancy and academically rigorous âsecondary school,â Westminster School in London. I had gotten rejected from all the top universities I applied to and was on my way to taking a gap year. I had no idea what I was doing with my life (spoiler, I still have no idea what I am doing now). So, without further ado, this is what I wish I had known at that time.
1. The mean girls donât matter in this cruel world đ .
You know Harriet and Layla, those two super b****y mean girls who kicked you out of their cool girl group? And then you cried every night when you went home for months because of all the debilitatingly painful social anxiety they made you feel? Well, it turns out that both Harriet and Layla were seriously addicted to cocaine. Yeap. So, when everyone else is starting university, theyâll both end up going to rehab. And the good news is that once high school is over, youâll never speak to them again. In fact, one girl in their group, Sala, will run into your sister one day in TopShop on the high street. Sheâll try to apologize for bullying you, but by then, youâll be living your best life in California, so you wonât even give a f**k.
Bad things will happen to the people who treated you badly, and for a brief moment in time, that revenge from the universe will taste so sweet. But the sad news is that bad things will also happen to people who donât deserve it. Your friend will have Crohnâs disease flares that prevent him from working for years. Your other friendâs dad will die of pancreatic cancer. Your friendsâ parents will start dying, but luckily not yours, yet (touch wood).
The point is that you truly have no idea what is going on in other peopleâs lives. While Iâm not excusing the people that treated you horribly, often the people who are the meanest and cruelest and the most fucked up are, in fact, suffering the most on the inside. So, donât take it personally. Just keep calm and carry the f**k on with living your best life as much as you can. Life is cruel and unfair, and not everything happens for a reason because there is actually an unimaginable amount of needless suffering in the world. Which brings me to my next pointâŚ
2. You have suffered enough đââď¸đЏ.
So, you first got your period when you were 11. Even though you had to pop 800mg of ibuprofen every couple of hours for the first two days each time, because your cramps were too painful, you told the GP when you were 16 that your periods were ânormal.â Well, girl, let me tell you: they werenât. Experiencing that much pain on a regular basis is completely unnecessary. In fact, sooner rather than later, youâll decide that youâre done having periods altogether. Youâll get a Hormonal IUD, the Liletta, and that will stop your periods for a good 7 years. You wonât even stock tampons in your bathroom anymore, and youâll never look back.
You come from a super privileged background, but that doesnât mean you should continue to torture yourself with pain. âIâve had two C-sections, and Iâve suffered enough,â the comedian Ali Wong will say when she talks about the mom guilt she feels for not making her kids salmon with quinoa or when one of her friends tries to warn her against taking pain killers that she needs because those medications could transfer into her breast milk.
Just by the very nature of our reproductive organs, females have suffered enough. Youâve suffered enough. Donât believe all the hocus-pocus of the all-natural girls who use flowers and bathe in rivers instead of taking real medication to manage their symptoms. The pain and faff and b******t of all the periods youâve already had is already more than enough. Western medicine might not be perfect, but f**k it, youâre not spiritually superior for not putting hormones in your body. Donât shame other women for putting chemicals and medications into their bodies that they need, either, or for dancing with the fairies and reading crystals. Do what works for you, and donât be f*****g judgmental. Take the pills, or get that Hormonal IUD shoved up your vagina and run. Periods are a complete f*****g waste of time for you, and you should know sooner rather than later that youâre done with them. Get the medication you need, be grateful for it, and move on. And the IUD also prevents pregnancy, which is great news for you đ.
3. No one remembers the worst moments of your life, except you đ.
Remember when you were sitting in the middle of Yard a couple of months ago, and you were wearing your favorite dark blue jumper that you got from a vintage shop on Portobello Road, and all the other students were about? And then, out of nowhere, a bird shat all along your arm? And then Harriet and Layla and their stupid gaggle of super b****y friends laughed at you? Well, you might have felt like you were going to die in that moment from shame, and that is seared into your memory to this day. But trust me, no one remembers that event now.
The bad news is that youâre going to remember the most painfully embarrassing moments of your life. The good news is that nobody else will. When it comes to these super, earth-shattering moments of shame and embarrassment, the only thing you can do is have immense compassion for yourself. First, give yourself a hug. Physically hug yourself, donât just give yourself that flimsy mental reassurance. And then whisper words of endless acceptance and forgive yourself. Reassure yourself that no one else is going to remember and that you are nothing but a little imperfect human worthy of love and belonging.
4. Make your own money đ° đ¤.
In your senior year of college, they will start offering Business Analytics as a new major at your fancy business school. While all your other friends are winding down and partying up, it will be the best decision of your life to take those coding classes and build the technical skills of that major. Youâll find learning to code difficult, but then youâll graduate from college with this whole extra monetizable skillset that even the banker w*****s and the consultants wonât be able to compete with.
Even though itâs boring and corporate, having marketable skills in this economy and this world is very important. You have to make enough money to support yourself and keep yourself safe. Having your own money will give you the freedom to move around wherever you want. It also means you donât have to answer to anyone. When you get fired from your job, and you have to move in with your boyfriend at the time, youâre going to regret not having more of your own money.
So, make sure you start building some skills that are valued in the economy. There will be a pandemic, and youâll get fired, and the economy will suck for a while. And the only way you can make it through all of that is by having your own stash of as much cash as possible. Then youâll be able to leave any situation that you donât like. Study hard. Get some marketable skills. Then, save money. And learn how to invest that money so you can have more of it. Donât trust some crypto loser who is just going to blow up your bank account.
5. Take your fun interests seriously đ đ¨.
You may think that at age 19, you donât know much about your place in the world. But I would argue that you know as much about yourself right now as youâre ever going to know. In fact, when you go to university and start out in the workplace, the pressures for you to conform to someone youâre not are going to get even stronger. At 19, you actually have a pretty clear vision of what you want to do because you havenât given the world enough time to beat it out of you. You want to write books, and while youâre not going to let the culture of your business school change you too much, you will still spend a good chunk of your twenties working in tech companies you donât like, just to arrive back at square one where you already are at 19.
So, take stock right now of your interests. What do you like to do? Whether itâs writing, visiting museums, or creating art, these interests are just going to become diluted without changing as you get older. Donât let the world and corporate America bash those out of you. Take your fun interests as seriously as you can. They might seem like hobbies, but one day, youâre going to think about creating a business out of them, and youâll wish you hadnât given up drawing ten years ago because then it will feel like youâre starting from scratch. Keep going with those passions and interests. Nurture them and keep them alive, like youâre adding logs and stoking a little campfire. One day, youâre going to be grateful that you still have them when everyone else is turning 30, and they have no concrete passions or interests.
6. Accept your parentsâ imperfections and take responsibility for your life đ¤¸đźââď¸.
Over the next few years, you should go to lots of therapy and also ACA, which is a 12-step program for dysfunctional families. But once youâre an adult, sooner or later, youâre going to have to learn to forgive your parents for all the things they did wrong, be grateful for all the things they did right, and then move on. In fact, philosopher Alain de Botton decided not to complain about his parents once he turned 40. Youâve still got plenty of years before that, but once youâve started sorting your s**t out, blaming your parents constantly for everything that's wrong in your life will start to sound awkward and a bit immature.
Letâs face it. As an independent adult, you have to take responsibility for your own life, and you canât really blame your parents for anything anymore. Itâs up to you to fix whatever wounds they might have carved into you. Thatâs not going to be easy, and it will take a lot of different attempts to solve these issues. Youâre going to try magic mushrooms a lot (which will help with your anxiety), EMDR, peyote, and also various psilocybin protocols. Just be open-minded about what can work for you. Ultimately, youâre going to settle on ACA for free group therapy as part of a 12-step program.
Youâre not only going to have to forgive your parents, but youâre also going to have to forgive yourself, learn to become your own loving parent and learn how not to abandon yourself in the ways that they did in your childhood. While youâll be grateful to have your siblings around, there will be a significant limit to how much they can help you because, in reality, your parents treat each of you differently. Thatâs something youâll have to accept.
7. Youâre a lot stronger than you think đŞ.
On Wednesday, March 10th, 2021, something astronomically fucked up is going to happen to you. Sorry in advance for the warning. I wish I could rub a lamp and help you avoid your fate somehow, but I canât. Life can be powerful and cruel like that. Letâs just say the negotiations class youâre going to take in business school is going to come in really handy, as is the book, âNever Split The Difference,â by Chris Voss. Itâs definitely the most valuable studying youâll ever do.
While you donât believe in manifesting and the spiritual world all the much, you do have to be careful not to tempt the universe sometimes. If you shake your fists at the sky, asking for a sign, then bam! Thatâs when s**t is going to hit you. And how dramatic the hit is depends on whether the universe thinks you need a full 180-course correction in your life. Sometimes, it does take the severity of a near-death experience to detonate the road you were driving down, so youâre forced to swerve around and bolt the other way. It will take you another year of barely surviving to figure out what is up from down. Thatâs okay. Youâll be okay.
Youâre a lot stronger than you think, and unfortunately, youâll only learn that once youâre truly tested. You pass with flying colors, by the way. You will rise to the occasion, and how you handle that situation is a huge testament to your character. The schoolboys who tease everyone in your History and Economics classes will seem like dust to you after youâve gone through all that.
8. Follow the joy đ.
Life is part tragedy, but itâs also part ecstasy. Youâre going to climb trees and see sunsets that stretch for a thousand miles. Youâre going to kiss a new lover at your favorite bar in Mexico City under the twanging, teasing guitar of cumbia music. Youâre going to jump into cold lakes that take your breath away and wear colorful suits on stages. I know youâve spent basically your whole life up until this point taking exams and studying at academically rigorous institutions. But there is a lot more to life than academic achievement, my dear.
When you find yourself in a beautiful moment of any kind, please try your best to be fully present. Banish any guilt away, bathe in downright wonder, and take it all in. You deserve it. You wonât remember those client emails you sent back in November 2023. All youâll remember is that you didnât go see The War on Drugs, one of your favorite bands because you had âworkâ to do that evening. Work is a completely irrelevant excuse. One day, corporations, empires, and probably even capitalism will crumble and fall to nothing. And all that will be left when that happens are your memories of that afternoon when you sat beside that quirky guy you liked in a garden. The sun was setting between the fuchsia bougainvillea and the turtle doves were cooing, and you whispered something explicit and cheeky in his ear.
9. You are enough, just as you are â¨.
I know you love to read Vogue and Vanity Fair because you like the colorful clothes and the aspirational lives in the advertisements. But one day, youâll learn that growing up in Londonâs stick-thin culture hasnât been the healthiest thing for your self-image. It will take trying LSD, actually, for you to embrace the roundness of your butt and the beauty of your own body for the first time.
Some a*****e you sleep with will say things to you like, âI prefer when women shave,â or âI prefer girls with longer hair.â But for just one of him, there will be many more men who quite like eating you out, hairy bush and all. Letting these kinder men love you will help you learn to love yourself. Itâs okay to admit that. Itâs okay to cry about that, even. Your therapist will tell you itâs good to be at least a bit of a narcissist; otherwise, you wouldnât be able to survive.
The world is a complex, messed-up place, and being born with a vulva means that your appearance often carries more weight than who you are as a person. Itâs an evil in society that is incredibly profitable because the more you care about how you look and hate yourself for it, the more likely you are to buy Botox and expensive makeup. Donât try to fix whatever is on the outside when itâs your insides that need to be loved and embraced.
Not every potential partner you meet is going to find you attractive, but thatâs really none of your beeâs wax. Youâre walking through this world a little uneven and a little scarred in parts, but itâs your quirks and imperfections that make you loveable and whole. Be sure to enjoy sleeping diagonally and hogging all the blankets while youâre single, by the way. Be sure to say nice things to yourself when you look in the mirror. And when you pass a cute guy walking down the street, remember that time you stood in front of a boy with blue eyes on the creaky wooden floor next to the bed. And as you watched him watch you take off your clothes, he said to you,
âDang!â
10. F**k it all đŁ.
I know that you feel pretty ashamed right now because you didnât get into a top university. Most of your classmates got into Oxford or got perfect SAT scores, but you had to take the test 4 times and then still basically failed. Let me tell you: no matter how much you try to build yourself up with prestige, awards, and fancy job titles, external praise doesnât really matter. In addition to liking yourself, it is just as important to like your life and enjoy it.
I know that this phrase has just become popular, but itâs actually more important than you can imagine: you only live once. Itâs cliched, corny, and cheesy, but itâs true. You have nothing to lose. If you wake up one day and realize youâre miserable, donât just wallow for three years and waste your money on an MBA. Stand up and do something about it. When youâre old and wrinkly, youâre not going to regret shaking your life by the shoulders and blowing it up to give yourself a shot of being happy in this one realm we have called life. One realm. One throughline. One plot. Thatâs all we get. So, whether itâs a job that you despise with a shitty manager or a career you donât even know how you ended up in. Gather up everything you donât like and press delete.
Which of these points resonated with you? Do you have a burning desire to say anything else to your high school self? As always, paid subscribers can battle it out in the comments.
Much love to you all! I hope you enjoy your weekend.
Love,
Tash
đ âď¸
More Favorites From Misseducated đ âď¸
By Tash Doherty5
3030 ratings
Hello Wonderful Readers,
I felt a lot of resistance writing this piece. Iâm very tired right now. Most of you reading this are not in high school, and any of my younger cousins or friends who might be are probably just scrolling on TikTok. You can see how my inner critic is already working against me! Thatâs why itâs important to me to challenge myself. Iâm determined to write and publish this piece for you anyway.
Iâm stealing the idea of this list from Austin Kleon, who stole it from Debbie Millman. I listened to his story about it on Millmanâs podcast this week. Here, Iâve cobbled together ten things I wish I had known when I was graduating from high school. That year was 2013, and a lot has changed since then. Instagram existed at the time, but it wasnât widely used. This was years before TikTok, when the first major sex scandal about Jimmy Savile came out, and Oscar Pistorius, the South African sprinter, had just murdered his girlfriend, Reeva Steenkamp.
I was finishing up my A-Levels at my incredibly fancy and academically rigorous âsecondary school,â Westminster School in London. I had gotten rejected from all the top universities I applied to and was on my way to taking a gap year. I had no idea what I was doing with my life (spoiler, I still have no idea what I am doing now). So, without further ado, this is what I wish I had known at that time.
1. The mean girls donât matter in this cruel world đ .
You know Harriet and Layla, those two super b****y mean girls who kicked you out of their cool girl group? And then you cried every night when you went home for months because of all the debilitatingly painful social anxiety they made you feel? Well, it turns out that both Harriet and Layla were seriously addicted to cocaine. Yeap. So, when everyone else is starting university, theyâll both end up going to rehab. And the good news is that once high school is over, youâll never speak to them again. In fact, one girl in their group, Sala, will run into your sister one day in TopShop on the high street. Sheâll try to apologize for bullying you, but by then, youâll be living your best life in California, so you wonât even give a f**k.
Bad things will happen to the people who treated you badly, and for a brief moment in time, that revenge from the universe will taste so sweet. But the sad news is that bad things will also happen to people who donât deserve it. Your friend will have Crohnâs disease flares that prevent him from working for years. Your other friendâs dad will die of pancreatic cancer. Your friendsâ parents will start dying, but luckily not yours, yet (touch wood).
The point is that you truly have no idea what is going on in other peopleâs lives. While Iâm not excusing the people that treated you horribly, often the people who are the meanest and cruelest and the most fucked up are, in fact, suffering the most on the inside. So, donât take it personally. Just keep calm and carry the f**k on with living your best life as much as you can. Life is cruel and unfair, and not everything happens for a reason because there is actually an unimaginable amount of needless suffering in the world. Which brings me to my next pointâŚ
2. You have suffered enough đââď¸đЏ.
So, you first got your period when you were 11. Even though you had to pop 800mg of ibuprofen every couple of hours for the first two days each time, because your cramps were too painful, you told the GP when you were 16 that your periods were ânormal.â Well, girl, let me tell you: they werenât. Experiencing that much pain on a regular basis is completely unnecessary. In fact, sooner rather than later, youâll decide that youâre done having periods altogether. Youâll get a Hormonal IUD, the Liletta, and that will stop your periods for a good 7 years. You wonât even stock tampons in your bathroom anymore, and youâll never look back.
You come from a super privileged background, but that doesnât mean you should continue to torture yourself with pain. âIâve had two C-sections, and Iâve suffered enough,â the comedian Ali Wong will say when she talks about the mom guilt she feels for not making her kids salmon with quinoa or when one of her friends tries to warn her against taking pain killers that she needs because those medications could transfer into her breast milk.
Just by the very nature of our reproductive organs, females have suffered enough. Youâve suffered enough. Donât believe all the hocus-pocus of the all-natural girls who use flowers and bathe in rivers instead of taking real medication to manage their symptoms. The pain and faff and b******t of all the periods youâve already had is already more than enough. Western medicine might not be perfect, but f**k it, youâre not spiritually superior for not putting hormones in your body. Donât shame other women for putting chemicals and medications into their bodies that they need, either, or for dancing with the fairies and reading crystals. Do what works for you, and donât be f*****g judgmental. Take the pills, or get that Hormonal IUD shoved up your vagina and run. Periods are a complete f*****g waste of time for you, and you should know sooner rather than later that youâre done with them. Get the medication you need, be grateful for it, and move on. And the IUD also prevents pregnancy, which is great news for you đ.
3. No one remembers the worst moments of your life, except you đ.
Remember when you were sitting in the middle of Yard a couple of months ago, and you were wearing your favorite dark blue jumper that you got from a vintage shop on Portobello Road, and all the other students were about? And then, out of nowhere, a bird shat all along your arm? And then Harriet and Layla and their stupid gaggle of super b****y friends laughed at you? Well, you might have felt like you were going to die in that moment from shame, and that is seared into your memory to this day. But trust me, no one remembers that event now.
The bad news is that youâre going to remember the most painfully embarrassing moments of your life. The good news is that nobody else will. When it comes to these super, earth-shattering moments of shame and embarrassment, the only thing you can do is have immense compassion for yourself. First, give yourself a hug. Physically hug yourself, donât just give yourself that flimsy mental reassurance. And then whisper words of endless acceptance and forgive yourself. Reassure yourself that no one else is going to remember and that you are nothing but a little imperfect human worthy of love and belonging.
4. Make your own money đ° đ¤.
In your senior year of college, they will start offering Business Analytics as a new major at your fancy business school. While all your other friends are winding down and partying up, it will be the best decision of your life to take those coding classes and build the technical skills of that major. Youâll find learning to code difficult, but then youâll graduate from college with this whole extra monetizable skillset that even the banker w*****s and the consultants wonât be able to compete with.
Even though itâs boring and corporate, having marketable skills in this economy and this world is very important. You have to make enough money to support yourself and keep yourself safe. Having your own money will give you the freedom to move around wherever you want. It also means you donât have to answer to anyone. When you get fired from your job, and you have to move in with your boyfriend at the time, youâre going to regret not having more of your own money.
So, make sure you start building some skills that are valued in the economy. There will be a pandemic, and youâll get fired, and the economy will suck for a while. And the only way you can make it through all of that is by having your own stash of as much cash as possible. Then youâll be able to leave any situation that you donât like. Study hard. Get some marketable skills. Then, save money. And learn how to invest that money so you can have more of it. Donât trust some crypto loser who is just going to blow up your bank account.
5. Take your fun interests seriously đ đ¨.
You may think that at age 19, you donât know much about your place in the world. But I would argue that you know as much about yourself right now as youâre ever going to know. In fact, when you go to university and start out in the workplace, the pressures for you to conform to someone youâre not are going to get even stronger. At 19, you actually have a pretty clear vision of what you want to do because you havenât given the world enough time to beat it out of you. You want to write books, and while youâre not going to let the culture of your business school change you too much, you will still spend a good chunk of your twenties working in tech companies you donât like, just to arrive back at square one where you already are at 19.
So, take stock right now of your interests. What do you like to do? Whether itâs writing, visiting museums, or creating art, these interests are just going to become diluted without changing as you get older. Donât let the world and corporate America bash those out of you. Take your fun interests as seriously as you can. They might seem like hobbies, but one day, youâre going to think about creating a business out of them, and youâll wish you hadnât given up drawing ten years ago because then it will feel like youâre starting from scratch. Keep going with those passions and interests. Nurture them and keep them alive, like youâre adding logs and stoking a little campfire. One day, youâre going to be grateful that you still have them when everyone else is turning 30, and they have no concrete passions or interests.
6. Accept your parentsâ imperfections and take responsibility for your life đ¤¸đźââď¸.
Over the next few years, you should go to lots of therapy and also ACA, which is a 12-step program for dysfunctional families. But once youâre an adult, sooner or later, youâre going to have to learn to forgive your parents for all the things they did wrong, be grateful for all the things they did right, and then move on. In fact, philosopher Alain de Botton decided not to complain about his parents once he turned 40. Youâve still got plenty of years before that, but once youâve started sorting your s**t out, blaming your parents constantly for everything that's wrong in your life will start to sound awkward and a bit immature.
Letâs face it. As an independent adult, you have to take responsibility for your own life, and you canât really blame your parents for anything anymore. Itâs up to you to fix whatever wounds they might have carved into you. Thatâs not going to be easy, and it will take a lot of different attempts to solve these issues. Youâre going to try magic mushrooms a lot (which will help with your anxiety), EMDR, peyote, and also various psilocybin protocols. Just be open-minded about what can work for you. Ultimately, youâre going to settle on ACA for free group therapy as part of a 12-step program.
Youâre not only going to have to forgive your parents, but youâre also going to have to forgive yourself, learn to become your own loving parent and learn how not to abandon yourself in the ways that they did in your childhood. While youâll be grateful to have your siblings around, there will be a significant limit to how much they can help you because, in reality, your parents treat each of you differently. Thatâs something youâll have to accept.
7. Youâre a lot stronger than you think đŞ.
On Wednesday, March 10th, 2021, something astronomically fucked up is going to happen to you. Sorry in advance for the warning. I wish I could rub a lamp and help you avoid your fate somehow, but I canât. Life can be powerful and cruel like that. Letâs just say the negotiations class youâre going to take in business school is going to come in really handy, as is the book, âNever Split The Difference,â by Chris Voss. Itâs definitely the most valuable studying youâll ever do.
While you donât believe in manifesting and the spiritual world all the much, you do have to be careful not to tempt the universe sometimes. If you shake your fists at the sky, asking for a sign, then bam! Thatâs when s**t is going to hit you. And how dramatic the hit is depends on whether the universe thinks you need a full 180-course correction in your life. Sometimes, it does take the severity of a near-death experience to detonate the road you were driving down, so youâre forced to swerve around and bolt the other way. It will take you another year of barely surviving to figure out what is up from down. Thatâs okay. Youâll be okay.
Youâre a lot stronger than you think, and unfortunately, youâll only learn that once youâre truly tested. You pass with flying colors, by the way. You will rise to the occasion, and how you handle that situation is a huge testament to your character. The schoolboys who tease everyone in your History and Economics classes will seem like dust to you after youâve gone through all that.
8. Follow the joy đ.
Life is part tragedy, but itâs also part ecstasy. Youâre going to climb trees and see sunsets that stretch for a thousand miles. Youâre going to kiss a new lover at your favorite bar in Mexico City under the twanging, teasing guitar of cumbia music. Youâre going to jump into cold lakes that take your breath away and wear colorful suits on stages. I know youâve spent basically your whole life up until this point taking exams and studying at academically rigorous institutions. But there is a lot more to life than academic achievement, my dear.
When you find yourself in a beautiful moment of any kind, please try your best to be fully present. Banish any guilt away, bathe in downright wonder, and take it all in. You deserve it. You wonât remember those client emails you sent back in November 2023. All youâll remember is that you didnât go see The War on Drugs, one of your favorite bands because you had âworkâ to do that evening. Work is a completely irrelevant excuse. One day, corporations, empires, and probably even capitalism will crumble and fall to nothing. And all that will be left when that happens are your memories of that afternoon when you sat beside that quirky guy you liked in a garden. The sun was setting between the fuchsia bougainvillea and the turtle doves were cooing, and you whispered something explicit and cheeky in his ear.
9. You are enough, just as you are â¨.
I know you love to read Vogue and Vanity Fair because you like the colorful clothes and the aspirational lives in the advertisements. But one day, youâll learn that growing up in Londonâs stick-thin culture hasnât been the healthiest thing for your self-image. It will take trying LSD, actually, for you to embrace the roundness of your butt and the beauty of your own body for the first time.
Some a*****e you sleep with will say things to you like, âI prefer when women shave,â or âI prefer girls with longer hair.â But for just one of him, there will be many more men who quite like eating you out, hairy bush and all. Letting these kinder men love you will help you learn to love yourself. Itâs okay to admit that. Itâs okay to cry about that, even. Your therapist will tell you itâs good to be at least a bit of a narcissist; otherwise, you wouldnât be able to survive.
The world is a complex, messed-up place, and being born with a vulva means that your appearance often carries more weight than who you are as a person. Itâs an evil in society that is incredibly profitable because the more you care about how you look and hate yourself for it, the more likely you are to buy Botox and expensive makeup. Donât try to fix whatever is on the outside when itâs your insides that need to be loved and embraced.
Not every potential partner you meet is going to find you attractive, but thatâs really none of your beeâs wax. Youâre walking through this world a little uneven and a little scarred in parts, but itâs your quirks and imperfections that make you loveable and whole. Be sure to enjoy sleeping diagonally and hogging all the blankets while youâre single, by the way. Be sure to say nice things to yourself when you look in the mirror. And when you pass a cute guy walking down the street, remember that time you stood in front of a boy with blue eyes on the creaky wooden floor next to the bed. And as you watched him watch you take off your clothes, he said to you,
âDang!â
10. F**k it all đŁ.
I know that you feel pretty ashamed right now because you didnât get into a top university. Most of your classmates got into Oxford or got perfect SAT scores, but you had to take the test 4 times and then still basically failed. Let me tell you: no matter how much you try to build yourself up with prestige, awards, and fancy job titles, external praise doesnât really matter. In addition to liking yourself, it is just as important to like your life and enjoy it.
I know that this phrase has just become popular, but itâs actually more important than you can imagine: you only live once. Itâs cliched, corny, and cheesy, but itâs true. You have nothing to lose. If you wake up one day and realize youâre miserable, donât just wallow for three years and waste your money on an MBA. Stand up and do something about it. When youâre old and wrinkly, youâre not going to regret shaking your life by the shoulders and blowing it up to give yourself a shot of being happy in this one realm we have called life. One realm. One throughline. One plot. Thatâs all we get. So, whether itâs a job that you despise with a shitty manager or a career you donât even know how you ended up in. Gather up everything you donât like and press delete.
Which of these points resonated with you? Do you have a burning desire to say anything else to your high school self? As always, paid subscribers can battle it out in the comments.
Much love to you all! I hope you enjoy your weekend.
Love,
Tash
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