Not a Misery Chick
Just ace.
When I was younger,
My peers thought I was "abnormal" because I didn't have crushes like the others,
Or if I did, they lived in stories,
Fictional, far away, untouchable.
In high school,
I wasn't much like Daria,
I was involved.
Vice President in my third year,
Competing in quiz bees,
Active in journalism,
Taekwondo on weekends,
Not for trophies,
But for strength.
One day,
A guy I knew since elementary,
Joked in front of his girlfriend,
After our council meeting, no less,
Said he would've 'courted' me
If I wasn't manlier than him.
Without missing a beat, I shot back,
Who said I would've wanted you, anyway?
Everyone laughed, even his girlfriend,
And I saw how people saw me.
For women, I was just like them—
Into fashion,
Into strange, geeky things,
Unapologetically me.
But to male peers I was
Domineering,
Emasculating,
A jock may be,
Leaning into my "masculine" side
Just to mock their stereotypes.
Back then,
I didn't have the words for it.
Maybe I was on the ace side of queer,
But it didn't matter.
Gender, sexuality —
I never felt bound by them,
I was just me.
If I were drawn to someone,
It could be anyone—
Like that manic pixie dream girl
I once saw at a train station.
Daria, you,
With your sharp wit,
Your army jacket and dark skirt —
You were never labeled,
But to me,
You were ace-coded.
You smashed the stereotypes.
We're not cold and robotic,
And we don't all love the same.
In "Misery Chick", I realized
It's okay to ignore the rigamarole.
Normal is relative,
And I'm not a misery chick.
About the Creator
Karina Thyra
Fangirl of sorts.
Twitter: @ArianaGsparks




Comments (5)
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Congrats! 🏆
Such a phenomenal piece!
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well done