This week, I met with the disability office at my local community office. I am signed up to begin classes in the fall, but until now have conspicuously and deliberately avoided saying as much, not out of concern for privacy, but out of a borderline superstitious paranoia- a feeling; nay, a certainty; that something will go wrong, and I would once again be prevented from making progress in my life.
First I was convinced that my high school would mess something up with the paperwork. This prediction wasn’t wrong per se- the high school did, true to character, misplace and forget paperwork, and miss deadlines, but this did not prevent my enrollment.
Next, I feared that I would not be able to find classes at a time when my illnesses would allow me to attend. This turned out to be a non-issue. There was a minor glitch whereupon I was automatically enrolled in a compulsory first year class at an unworkable time, and the orientation speakers made it abundantly clear that changing these selections was strongly discouraged. For a few brief moments, I thought that all was lost. But instead, I simply had to have a short conversation with an administrator.
Unlike nearly every authority figure in high school, who was usually either willing or able to help, but never both, these people were in fact quite helpful. I didn’t even need to break out my script in which I hit all the legal buzzwords, making it clear that I am prepared to play hardball, and even take legal action if need be. I only got halfway through explaining the problem before the administrator offered a solution- switching me to a later class with a few clicks.
Meeting with the disability office was the last major hurdle before I could sit back and enjoy summer prior to starting classes. And going in, I was bracing for a fight. I had gotten my classes by being early and lucky, I reasoned, and the administrator had yielded the moment I hinted at health issues because it was outside his field of expertise, and he wasn’t willing to walk into that particular mine field without a map. But these people, by their very job description, would probably be better versed in the minutiae of the law than I was, and could cite their own policies which I hadn’t even seen.
It was, after all, their job to cross examine claims of disability, and mine were not particularly easy to understand or grasp. Worse still, the office had specifically requested documentation from my doctors and my high school, and while my doctors had come through, the high school, true to form, had procrastinated, and only given me some of what I asked for, leaving me light on supporting documentation. I prepared for a vicious argument, or worse, to be shown the door without any accommodations, forced to go and assemble paperwork, doctors, and lawyers for a full formal meeting, which would probably take until after classes started to arrange.
To my absolute shock, the meeting went smoothly. The people there were not just reasonable, but helpful. They didn’t quite “get” everything, and I had to explain how things worked more often than I might have expected for people who are supposed to be experts, but there was no deliberate obstructionism, no procedural tactics, and no trying to strong arm me into one course of action over another. The contrast was jarring, and to a great extent, unnerving. I expected there to be a catch, and there wasn’t.
There is a Russian proverb to the effect of: only a fool smiles without reason. This has a double meaning that loses something in translation. Firstly, the obvious: the person who smiles without provocation is a naive idiot. And secondly, that if an otherwise smart-looking person in front of you is smiling without apparent reason, you’re being played.
As a rule, I don’t trust people, myself included. It might be slightly more accurate to say that what I don’t trust are the conditions and random factors that give rise to people’s behaviors, but at a certain point, that distinction becomes merely academic. This is neither an inherited worldview nor one I have refined through careful philosophizing, but rather one that has been painfully learned over many years of low level trauma, and staccato bursts of high tragedy. I have been told that this attitude is unfortunately cynical for one of my age and talent, but I do not think at present that it can be unlearned.
The last year, measured from about this same time last year, when it became well and truly clear that I was definitely going to finally be done with high school, has been the most serene and content in recent memory. It didn’t have all of the high points and excitement of some years, which is why I hesitate to declare it indisputably the happiest, but the elimination of my largest source of grief in high school (besides of course my disabilities themselves) has been an unprecedented boon to my quality of life.
Yet at the same time I find myself continually in a state of suspense. I keep waiting for the other shoe to drop, for me to be hauled back to high school and my Sisyphean purgatory there, and for the fight to resume. I cannot convince myself that something isn’t about to go wrong.
Perhaps, it has been suggested to me, coming to terms with this uncertainty is merely part of adulthood, and I am overthinking it per the norm. Or perhaps I misjudge just how abnormally awful my particular high school experience was, and the armchair psychologists are correct in saying that going through everything I have has warped my perspective and created a syndrome akin to low level PTSD. I wouldn’t know how to tell the difference in any case.
But assuming for the moment that my instincts are wrong, and that I am not any more likely to be on the cusp of a tragic downfall any more than usual, how do I assuage these fears? Moreover, how do I separate strategic conservatism from actual paranoia? How do I prevent my predictions of future misery from becoming self-fulfilling?
I have no particular answer today, other than vague rhetoric towards the notion of being more optimistic, and possibly trying to create self-fulfilling prophecies that work in the other direction. But luckily, with this being only the beginning if summer, and my schedule for the semester being decidedly light, the question is not urgent. Nor will I be responsible for answering it alone; amid all this uncomfortable talk of independence and adult decisions, I have taken a fair bit of solace in knowing that I have a strong safety net and ample resources.