Redxk wrote:
I was certain that if people outside my family ever found out about the way I made noises, repeated nonsense words and phrases and songs, played dress-up constantly so that I could have silk and satin against my skin and walked funny all the time I would be truly the worst person in their eyes. I guarded my secret as if it were my very life.
I had a "shameful" secret like this; mine was disposable nappies. I've never really known why, but I was fascinated by the sides of them; the shape they made while being worn by infants. The way they looked square but yet formed a round hole for the leg to go through. That plus the stickers to tape them were my obsessions. I used to wish my mum would have a baby so I could watch them in their nappy all day long. I even went so far as to steal one such disposable nappy from a family friend once so I could put it on my doll. Only then did the obsession cool off.
Whoa, I've never admitted that to anybody, ever, until now.
I was once playing with this baby in the playground ... we were crawling through this play drainpipe, and I'm so glad no-one saw me pull his pants down so I could look at his disposable nappy. Thinking back now, that could have got me in some trouble, even though I was only in primary school at the time.
The important thing, I think, is I knew at the time these were not interests shared by other children, and so I kept them to myself. But not having anyone to talk to about them and feeling they were shameful secrets that made me feel like a bit of a deviant contributed to my feelings of social alienation over the years.
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"There once was a little molecule who dreamed of being part of the crest of a great wave..."
(From the story 'The Little Molecule' - Amazon Kindle, 2013)