Friday, November 1, 2013

If Facebook Were Around When I was Young ...


Upon waking up this morning, I grabbed myself a Diet Pepsi and a Reese’s peanut butter cup from my kid’s Halloween bucket and then sat down at the computer to check my facebook.  Yes, it was a very healthy breakfast and I’m an awesome mom.  Upon scrolling through facebook, I encountered the following status update:
Oh my god underage kids, we get it. You like to drink and act stupid on the weekends, like we ALL did in high school. Now please stop posting all over the internet every day for fuck’s sake.
My first thought was a solid “Hallelujah, sister!”  Before I continue, however, I must admit that we didn’t all drink and act stupid in high school.  I didn’t, and this is now a great point of pride and gratitude for me.  I’m so thankful that when my students ask, as my own children eventually will, that I can be honest when I say I didn’t drink or do drugs in high school.  The truth is that I had my first drink at a graduation party.  I had three wine coolers that night, and thought I was wasted.  I’m sure I looked like a damn fool at the time, but I fucking love that story now. 
So, I didn’t drink or do drugs in high school – truth.  College, however, is an entirely different tale.  That is precisely why after my praise of the above post, I turned to the thought, “Thank God facebook didn’t exist when I was younger.”  There would have been pictures of my drunken ass all over the internet.  I mean this literally too – because I had a hot ass and I had no qualms about exposing it.  I further had no qualms about exposing my breasts, proudly displaying my “half-dollar nipples.”  For some reason, I was incredibly proud of my nipples.  I was once told, “Oh yeah, wow.  That’s all nipple too – not just areola.  Those are indeed a thing of beauty.”  I’ve only encountered one woman ever who had nipples more magnificent than mine.  I know this because we had a bout about this and thus measured them by spreading silly putty over our nipples and comparing the outcome.  You can assume alcohol was involved during this epic battle of ours.  I’m going to also go ahead and assume that my mother-in-law is currently shaking her head in dismay as she reads this post.  Sorry, I’m a good girl now and I love your son and grandkids so very much, cross my heart.
I’m glad facebook didn’t exist the night I had so much whopatulli  that I fell down the stairs and then pissed my pants.  I’m glad facebook didn’t exist during the Oktoberfest season when I was writing profanities on strangers with a Sharpie and then stole some stranger’s corndog and ran away in hysterical laughter.  I’m glad facebook didn’t exist the night my best friend and I got kicked out of the bar because she was yelling at me and I was bawling hysterically atop a table. 
However, I’m also immensely glad for all of these fun memories, and grateful too that I have grown and matured.  I’m thankful I can laugh at those past hysterics now and be proud of the woman I am today.  Now my posts are pictures of me baking cookies with my daughter and there’s no shame in that.  So, halleluiah indeed to the above update, as some things are meant to only be shared as memories on your narcissistic blog post as opposed to being pictorially displayed on facebook.  And, again, seriously, when will a universal sarcasm font be declared? 

10 comments:

  1. WE NEED SARCASM FONT! STAT! This post is so true for me. I've never had silly putty on my nipples, but there's some embarrassing Kodak photos of me floating around all drunk and stupid. I thought they were forgotten and safe from the internet until that Damn throwback Thursday was invented and I keep getting tagged in embarrassing shit from the 90s. Oy.

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    1. Yes! Thankfully, none of my friends participate in Throwback Thursday. I have to add my then and now photos to this post, but I wanted to get it up right away this morning so I could start NaBloPoMo correctly. I hope to find time this weekend to visit all my favorite blogs, which of course includes yours.

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  2. We are kindred spirits. My own students do not believe that I was an innocent high school child. Let me preface, I look innocent, act kind...my idea of fun is the Target bargain bin and eating a sandwich while my toddler takes his one a week nap. But my students are generally partiers and cannot grasp that kids can be drink and drug free. But your story of college....oh shame shame, I think you stole my own intoxicated idiot past. Sigh. Sadly, no wonder suicides are on the rise among young,depression too...you can't escape a "young and dumb" moment, it bites you in the ass like a swarm of Africanized bees.

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    1. My students believe me because I tell them the wine cooler story. Then they laugh at me, but I still love that truth. But, yes, you are so sadly right. Kids expose themselves to so much shame and taunting, and they don't realize how much social media can hurt them. Social media has no doubt contributed to suicides. It is a very sad reality. Cyberbullying sucks, even if a student should "set yourself up" for that.

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  3. And luckily I try and avoid my dark past and those affiliated like the plague. I have a BFF and a husband who knew me back them but are sworn to secrecy, truly just glad I came to my senses and blossomed into a lovely adult. Although I did show my nipple to a small child last week, but it was cause I was breastfeeding in a parking lot, all covered up, uncovered to put baby back in his seat and did not realize heeeey self, check yourself for a wardrobe malfunction. So maybe I am not so much of a lady after all.

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  4. Hats off to a post that made me laugh and cringe at once! I can relate to the delayed onset of the partying gene, and making up for lost time in spectacular fashion! I avoided the silly putty/nipple combo, but not the booze/public nudity combo. Facebook would have ended me. Might still.

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    1. Thank you, thank you, thank you! Really? I thought putting silly putty on your nipples was a common college experiment. Ha! Thanks so much for stopping!

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  5. I am all over the sarcasm font! Who do we talk to about that? I too am sooo glad that social media wasn't a thing back in my days....

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    1. Right? Who DO we talk to about that? That may be my new quest? Bill Gates, maybe? I don't know.

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  6. Amen!! There are college pictures hidden in a box somewhere in my basement, far from a computer screen. I am scared for my children! Ah!

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