Part 1

1.8K 40 10
                                    

"The most painful thing is losing yourself in the process of loving someone too much, and forgetting that you are special too."

― Ernest Hemingway, Men Without Women



What you're about to read is a confession to you. An apology, if you prefer to call it that, as I've professed my love to you plenty of times—although it won't ever be enough—and you're at the knowledge of every crime I've committed since we met.

My Korean teacher repeatedly reiterated the lack of clarity in my essays and oral exams. I'm not good with words, you see. That's why I thought that letting you know about the events in my life that shaped me and the feelings that followed me throughout these months would make you understand me better.

I know our conversations weren't as deep as you probably expected. I've tried to explain myself to the best of my abilities and even if it was a mess you seemed to make out that flurry of words and comfort me. Sometimes, I truly thought you understood me more than I did.

It's true that we always talked in riddles and puzzles but it made more sense that way. Because our—my—love was pure madness and somehow the riddles explained it better than we ever could.

The lack of sleep shouldn't have affected my mind too much, at least in the part that's in charge of writing.

If you're reading this, I hope you understand. Sorry if I'm rambling a lot, and sorry if I will ramble more in the following pages. Right, sorry if I'm apologizing a lot—you told me not to do that. I just can't help it.

I was tortured since the age of 6 when I started going to elementary school, that's as far as I can remember. You could also say I was "bullied", it's what the adults like to call it, but it's the same thing. People get defensive, almost offended when I use the other term. "Wow," was a common reaction, "that's a bit extreme, don't you think?" I didn't think it was extreme.

When I so naively asked my teacher the difference between the two words, she chuckled and looked at me as if I asked her what the difference between hot and cold was. Surprise was another clear feeling I could read from her expression. She asked me how I knew those words. I simply said I heard them from outside and she told me to forget them.

That evening, when I came home, I took the chair from my mother's desk and put it next to the bookshelf, I climbed it and looked at the books on the top shelf. They were the books she used the least and between them, sitting all dusty and forgotten, was also the dictionary.

I blew and rubbed the dust away then I looked for the two words. I read the two definitions closely and more than one time but I still didn't understand. They were the same.

I didn't ask my teacher anything else. My teacher was clearly against explaining them to me.

But I was sure, I knew those two words extremely well because I felt them on my skin.

I wanted to be an idol. I told everyone in my class because I thought it was a normal dream—we all watched idols on TV in the afternoon—and being an astronaut seemed a lot harder. Apparently, it wasn't. Because I wanted to perform on a stage, I was "pretentious", "narcissistic", an "attention-seeker", and a "whore". I didn't know what they meant and thought they were compliments and they etched those words into my skin.

I later found their definitions in the dictionary and understood what they were saying.

I wasn't the only girl who wanted to be an idol. Hayoon, a classmate of mine, dreamt of testing for JYP, SM, YG, and all those big companies. She took dance and singing classes, they were both in group and private. She could afford it because her family was very rich. From what I heard in the classroom, she started training when she was just a little girl because her parents saw her dancing in front of the TV during an episode of Inkigayo.

Surprisingly, Hayoon was never shamed. Because she was "humble" and had "her feet on the ground". She was loved by everyone and was the most favored prospect for the role of an idol, everyone seemed to believe in her dream. She was confident, danced well, and was beautiful. All the girls went to her house at least twice a month to go to her huge pool, splendid garden, and majestic house. I never went, I was never invited.

She was good at everything and topped all subjects. However, I sang better than her. In music classes and festivals, I was always chosen and often took the roles instead of her. When she realized she wasn't the best, she became embarrassed and frustrated.

She didn't have any way of making me sing worse and neither could sing better than me, even after all those expensive lessons, so she took to poking fun at me to try and drag me down. Of course her friends joined as well. They were always calling me "ugly", "weird", and "gross" in a way that didn't seem childish or playful, but demeaning and insulting.

The other kids constantly berated me between classes, glued my books to the desk, slapped me and then ran away. They knew all the spots where there was no CCTV in the school. They even stole my brand-new headphones and glued my shoestrings to my shoes when I didn't see them. We wore slippers and my shoes were in my locker.

My teachers never helped me. I've tried telling them and they didn't believe me, or rather, they chose not to believe me because that was easier for them.

Only a girl had the courage to help me, it only took one word and two days to have everyone against her. "Stop," she only said that and then everyone hated her. You never go against the group, you never try to make yourself different, you never try to fight back.

In the end, I understood the difference between torture and bullying: one was for hurting and one was for fun.

During middle school, the bullying stepped up a notch. Some of my classmates went to my same middle school, they had many friends there and the rumors spread like wildfire. Many of the students liked to take their stress out by bullying other students. They were pathetic and talentless, they hated anyone who had potential unless they provided them anything, like Hayoon.

Smoking was illegal. But they didn't care. They found all the corners of the school where the CCTV didn't see them and studied where the professors usually walked to avoid their path. It wasn't always perfect and sometimes they were caught but it sure helped them and the bullies.

One day, I was dragged by my hair behind the basketball court and after getting pushed to the ground, the girls started slapping, laughing, and kicking me. The smoke from their cigarettes and the kicks to my belly and back took the air out of me. I couldn't breathe and I thought I was going to die. They were experienced—they noticed my lack of breath, gave me breaks to catch it, and started kicking me again.

They were caught by a teacher who forgot his bag. They claimed they were only giving me "birthday punches" and didn't admit anything, nor apologized. They weren't stupid either. The girls had a very good reputation and a good student persona, essentially they didn't have any criminal records.

When I was asked what happened, I was ready to tell them all the atrocities that took place in school. But then, I remembered the girls' eyes. I looked at the professor and I knew, right there and then, that he didn't believe me, even before I said anything. They wouldn't have done anything but the word would have been out, that I snitched on the bullies and then I wouldn't have survived.

So I stayed silent.

The girls only got punished for smoking after they explained they only wanted to try and continued to do it anyway.

Between the end of middle school and the start of high school, the bullies got more creative. They tied me up and broke my legs with a crowbar. The older the girls got, the more of them wanted to be idols, and the first thing they had to do was to get rid of the competition. They succeeded as I stopped dancing altogether since that day.

I continued singing but nobody wants to see an idol in a wheelchair, right?

After I couldn't walk normally anymore, they started treating me like a rag. They used me to clean the bathroom, by pushing me around on the floor, putting my face against the toilet, and mopping me with dirty water. I was like a toy to them and their friends joined the fun.

I Just Can't Help It // Chaewon x ReaderDonde viven las historias. Descúbrelo ahora