
We are strangers, we are aliens
We are not of this world
— “Not of This World,” Petra
Every time I observe groups of teen-agers interact, I’m reminded of why I disliked that period of my life so much. For as long as I can remember, I’ve felt like an alien on this planet, but there was something about those years that made it seem more acute and more painful. It was the start of realizing just how different I am.
For some teens, there’s a casualness to their social interaction that I never felt. I eventually learned to fake it well, but I never quit feeling like a stranger in a strange land.
By high school, I had leadership roles at church and at school, but I never lost the feeling that I was an actor playing a part when I was with others — like some kind of alien wearing a disguise as a human. It was then that I realized I never felt as alone as I did in crowds.
I was thinking about this again recently because of sitting in a restaurant watching a group of teens interact. There’s a part of me that wants to say that they made me uncomfortable with the forced casualness of their time together, but there’s another part of me that wonders if they really are casual and natural together — and it’s the fact that they can do that so easily with random people that makes me uncomfortable — because I can’t.
Maybe it makes me feel this way because it reminds me of just how different I felt as a teen — and how I’ve continued to feel like the alien who’s pretending to fit in here.
Love & Hope — Episode 4:
Against all rational choice of will, an old hunger in my heart returns
We frequently go back to the past hoping to find a different future
Google’s geeks offer future vision that leads toward inhuman world
Are modern Americans tough enough to survive in united nation?
How much of what we do is driven by our unconscious social scripts?
What if emotional baggage we carry isn’t really our core issue?
Social media creates shallow ties at expense of deeper connections