I wrote this on May 23rd on my Instagram account: He told me when we decided to get divorced that I couldn't take care of myself. That I'd see how hard it was without him. At first, I thought I could do it by myself. But recently, I've started to believe it. Believe him.
I don't make any money blogging, despite what my feed showcases. Oh, how betraying the internet can be. Fake it till you make it, right? I'm a struggling artist. Have been for a while now. Waiting for my big break like the rest of them. Trying to maintain an indie blog talking about real shit like social justice and feminism isn't what businesses want. They want the fake Instagram bloggers. Which is fine. I've made my bed and I'll lie in it.
What really irked me today was that I have about one month's worth of savings left and have been searching for jobs for the last two months. I have two masters, but I'm still unemployed. On the verge of partial homelessness, I sat in the car and thought about life real hard. How the fuck am I divorced, jobless, and highly educated at 30 š¤ Tears filled me eyes and I thought back to my ex: You can't take care of yourself without me... You know how life just beats your ass and your left stunned? That's me right now. Wondering what's next. How my story ends. Begins. I wish someone had the answers for me. Just tell me what to do. Ya know? Do y'all feel me though?
At this point, I was fed up with life. I was cooked and overdone. I wanted people to stop looking at me like some kind of special person and see me for who I really was. An overly educated black girl with no parents, divorced, and no job. A fat girl with mental illness. Someone who floated around with no direction. Yup, that was me. Is me. Still me right now.
I was sitting in the car on that sunny day, looking at my depleting bank account. Checking my emails to see if any of the 100-plus low-grade jobs that I was clearly overqualified for had sent me a message back. Nothinā. Iād had one interview a few weeks ago, but that was unsure. She was still āfleshing out the details of the positionā. Unfortunately, my bills or rent hadnāt cared about the details. They needed to be paid. My uninsured body hadnāt cared about the details. It needed annual checkups now. My hopes and dreams hadnāt cared the fuck about the details. They needed nourishment and funding now!
As I always do, I lost my marbles. The strain of not having a family to support, help with anything weighed on me like a slab of marble. The embarrassment of having to apply for food stamps, walking into the unemployment office for ājob assistanceā, and making an appointment with a volunteer healthcare agency weighed heavily on my chest, my ribs as to where I couldnāt breathe.
Then I remembered what my ex told me as we were getting a divorce: you canāt take care of yourself without me. Youāll see how hard it is out there.
Was he right? Had I been to overly-confident about my abilities to maintain a job and pay my own bills? I mean, to the naked eye, it seems as though I have it all. Seems as though I have the ability to take over the world. My face is beat and my outfits are amazing. I have a following. People love me. Iām the fat, black girl whoās supposed to change the fashion game. It doesnāt appear that Iām on the brink of not being able to pay my rent, or put gas in my car or food in my stomach.
The internet isnāt real. It has real moments, but it isnāt real.
Iām struggling to stay afloat. Thatās the truth. I have one monthās worth of savings left. Thatās the truth. I have no plan of how Iām going to do any of this. Truth. Two credit cards. Almost maxed out. TRUTH.
Iām ashamed to admit that. To say it out of my mouth. I have two fuckinā masterās degrees and some work experience, yet Iām treated in the work world like I only have a 9th grade education.
Same day while drinking a slushee, I burst out crying in the front of my friendās house. In the car. Alone. I hate when people see me cry. I know. Iām weird.
As a black woman, we pride ourselves in maintaining this strong persona. We canāt let them see us weak. We canāt ask for help. Donāt let them see you down.
As a writer, I pride myself in being transparent. Itās how I built the foundation that I do have. I like sharing intimate moments with people. Especially people who get it. People who want real and appreciate that life isnāt snapshots of Instagram posts, but broken-down cars, and fucbois, and weight-gain, and bad ass kids.
Aināt nobody perfect. Whether their profile says it or not. I donāt care how many filters they place on their selfies.
After, I posted my cry for help, people started to reach out in droves. I crocodile cried again. Yāall know that ugly ass frog-face cry? Yep, that was me.
My inbox blew up with people wanting me to know to not listen to my ex or my inner demon. People that were Muslim talked about patience. People who werenāt Muslim talked about hope and faith. A few individuals even asked for my PayPal info. I told them to hold off a few weeks (cuz ya never know, maybe a job or two would call me back). A few didnāt care and sent money anyway. *Inserts Frog-Face Tears*
I was so overwhelmed by the love. The hundreds of comments and likes. Strangers from different states offering to speak with the HR at their jobs and that theyād even put me up in a room if need be. Itās more than Iāve even gotten from my own blood relatives that see me struggle every day. Women shared similar āstruggle-busā stories of when they got divorced, had their dignity stripped, and was now starting over. From scratch.
My heart swelled. And if you know me, Iām not an emotional person. Well, I try not to show it. But these strangers, these followers rejuvenated me at a time that I needed upliftment, an ear to listen, a shoulder to cry on. They say that I was the one who gave them life on a daily basis. I believe itās the other way around.
Itās Ramadan. Itās the first day. Iām writing this with a hunger migraine. Iām cranky. And my day has been filled with filling out job apps and researching crowdfunding sites so that I can continue to write, be an artist, I guess.
One thing I learned today was to be humble, be grateful for the things you have, and never lose hope. Who knows what tomorrow will bring for me? Maybe I wonāt be broke for long. Itās up to me to have hope and keep grinding and be better in this life and for the sake of the hereafter.
Xoxo,