12 and counting

LINK: 12 and counting

Currently listening to: Stan – Eminem

Dear Mister I’m-Too-Good-To-Call-Or-Write-My-Fans,
This’ll be the last package I ever send your ass
It’s been six months and still no word. I don’t deserve it?
I know you got my last two letters;
I wrote the addresses on ’em perfect
So this is my cassette I’m sending you, I hope you hear it
I’m in the car right now, I’m doing 90 on the freeway
Hey Slim, I drank a fifth of vodka, you dare me to drive?
You know the song by Phil Collins “In the Air Tonight”

What do you remember best about being 12 years old?

Prompt snagged from: NY Times

I musta been what… in the 8th grade at this point? I was already out of step with everyone else—skipping a year of school had made me younger, smaller, easier to single out. By then I was still recovering from the 7th grade nightmare.

When I was only 11 years old, I became the target of a boy named Sam, an international student from Hong Kong. He was 16 years old. He had a car and could drive. He was old enough to be in high school. But for reasons I’ll never understand, he was placed in the 8th grade, while I was in the 7th grade. A child who should have technically been in grade school. That five-year gap felt enormous at the time, almost predatory. From the moment we crossed paths, he fixated on me with the intensity of an apex predator marking its prey.

We met through a girl in orchestra, we were both violinists. She was dating his best friend, also a foreign exchange student. One day, we all had lunch together. That was the moment everything changed. From then on, Sam became fixated on me. He asked me out relentlessly, cornered me, and offered to drive me home. Every time I said no, it seemed to make him angrier and try harder to get me to go with him. Cutting ties with him and the others didn’t solve anything. In fact, it only made things worse.

He began stalking me in ways that seeped into every part of my life. He’d call my house and hang up, again and again. He loitered by my locker until I started avoiding it during lunch, my books and belongings essentially held hostage by his presence. Walking down the hallways, I could feel his stare burning into me, following me from behind. I was only a child, and his warped obsession wrapped around me like a trap I couldn’t escape.

When I started sitting at lunch with my neighborhood friends, most of them were Caucasian, things escalated even further. There was an Italian boy named Tony, who caught on immediately. Sometimes, he would sit directly between me and Sam, blocking his line of sight like a human shield. “What’s up with that guy staring at you?” he asked. He already knew the answer.

Then came the notes.

They began appearing in my locker, folded pieces of paper laced with hate and menace. “If I can’t have you, no one can.” “I’ll kill you and your family.” “We Asians need to stay together.” My hands would tremble as I read them, my chest tightening with dread. Each day, unlocking my locker felt like opening a coffin… was there going to be another threat waiting for me? I’d tear them up immediately, shredding them into pieces small enough to erase the evidence. I wanted to pretend none of it existed, even as the fear hollowed me out from the inside.

By mid-year, I couldn’t handle lunch anymore. I began hiding out in the library, too nauseous to eat. My stomach was constantly in knots, and when I did try to eat, the food wouldn’t stay down. I was hypervigilant, like a cornered animal—flinching at shadows, eyes daring over my shoulder, convinced that he was always behind me. At night, I had no respite. I had nightmares of him dragging me from my bed. The sound of footsteps in the dark made my heart lurch into my throat. I felt like I was going out of my mind. My weight dropped to 92 pounds. I was 11 years old, wasting away in fear.

I told no one except Tony. Not my parents. Definitely, not my teachers. No one. I was too ashamed, too afraid people would think I’d “led him on.” Worse, I was afraid Sam might retaliate against my family or friends if I spoke out. I’d seen the way he glared at Tony, the quiet perilous look behind his eyes, and it was enough to make me cut Tony off too. I didn’t want to put him at risk. I isolated myself because I thought it was the only way to keep everyone safe.

Every day after school, when I boarded the bus, I’d press my face against the window, quickly scanning the streets, praying I wouldn’t see his car following. That became my ritual, survival through vigilance. I was in fight-or-flight mode for the entire year.

It wasn’t until he finally graduated from 8th grade and moved on to high school that I could breathe again. And even then, I never felt truly safe until I heard that he’d gone back to Hong Kong. This was a huge relief to me… otherwise the two of us would have crossed paths again in high school and I don’t think I had it in me to do it all over again…


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25 responses to “12 and counting”

  1. Hazel Avatar

    I wish it was a fiction, Rojie, as it was a nightmarish experience for you. I’m sorry to hear that. It feels traumatic. But you’re stronger now, I believe, and safe too. Hugs!

    1. justrojie Avatar

      Thank you, Hazel! It was a hellish experience that no one should endure

      1. Hazel Avatar

        You’re always welcome, Rojie. Take care

        1. justrojie Avatar

          you too!!

  2. Nicholas K F Matte Avatar

    Holllllly!!! That sucked!!!! Jesus!! You were all little too!! Sorry to hear that!!

    1. justrojie Avatar

      Yeah. It was pretty traumatic at the time

  3. ibarynt Avatar

    What? You were 11. That was not just unhealthy obsession. What happened to Tony afterwards?

    1. justrojie Avatar

      Tony and I became friends again in 8th grade and after high school, idk what happened to him. I went to uni and we lost track of one another.

      1. ibarynt Avatar

        Oh that’s sad yoh lost touch. He must’ve turned out into a gentleman.

        1. justrojie Avatar

          i got curious after your comment and google’d him. he’s a professor at a uni 🙂

          1. ibarynt Avatar

            That’s lovely. Sounds like he’s turned out well.

          2. justrojie Avatar

            Yeah!

  4. Jesse Pallante Avatar

    Thank goodness he went back to Honk Kong. You didn’t deserve to be stalked like that and all his hate being thrown on you. Just thank God he left.

    1. justrojie Avatar

      I’ve never been so happy and relieved in my whole life. I could finally breathe

  5. Info-Man Avatar

    That is such a hard thing to do , he was such a creep ! I mean giving death threats to someone is clearly not your mistake, you should have called police.

    1. justrojie Avatar

      I was too scared to tell anyone at that time. But looking back I def should have told someone

  6. Maddie Cochere Avatar

    Rojie! I am shocked to read this! How horrible for you that this happened. To think you couldn’t go to your parents or teaches is truly terrible. I understand why you handled this as you did; things were different then. But if only someone had known the terrible, deadly threats, they might have immediately sent him back to Hong Kong. What a horrible person. I bet he’s either dead or in jail today.

    1. justrojie Avatar

      I hope he’s not out there terrorizing other people and jail would be a good place for him to be!

  7. Violet Lentz Avatar

    What a horrifying experience. You should find him on social media and ask WTF dude!!!!

    1. justrojie Avatar

      😂 I def don’t wanna see what his mug looks like now. Ugh he was not cute at all and I can only imagine how much worse he looks now

  8. Edward Ortiz Avatar

    What a horrible experience. That guy was definitely a little crazy.

    1. justrojie Avatar

      he’s beyond a little crazy he was a nutjob

      1. Edward Ortiz Avatar

        That’s for sure.

  9. April Avatar

    Such a creep he was!

    1. justrojie Avatar

      Damn straight!

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