I have a dark secret: I was goth in high school. Given that goths don't really like to have their pictures taken, I had managed to keep my secret from my fiance pretty easily.
Embarrassingly enough, the story broke at my grandmother's funeral, where pictures of the family were scattered around the country church where her services were held.
I tried to distract him, but he zeroed right in on an older picture of my sweet wonderful grandmother, looking confused while being hugged by a girl with black and pink hair wearing a dog collar and a black silk gown. (No, that's not me to the left, that's a representative photo. There's not a chance I'm exposing mine to more people than have already seen it.)
"Is that you?" he asked. I could only nod, eyes cast down.
It all started around 1993 or so.
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I listened to alternative music and wore a lot of horrible-looking Goodwill castoff clothing, like silly T-shirts and jeans that were ripped up and safety-pinned back together. I dyed my hair and my shoes the same colors.
My style felt loopy and amateur until I met Amber, a friend of a friend who frequented the punk club for teens in my small town. She had black hair and wore fishnet stockings and superfluous things like vests and lots of chains and boots. I was impressed and envied her tough, don't-f**k-with-me vibe.
I had no discernible style and no particular talents, unless you count my ability to be teased and put up with an older sister who was a gorgeous drama-department sweetheart. My childhood "I can do anything" confidence was rapidly slipping away. So I decided instead of concocting my own strong personality, I would just scare the heck out of people.
Building a Mystery ... or Just Dressing Like Him
I started buying fishnets and Doc Martens and listening to industrial music, and I loved it. Everything felt dramatic and intense. Frequently, nights were spent in a car with Amber and some of my other newfound friends, driving aimlessly and listening to Skinny Puppy at ear-shattering volume.
The small, strip-mall-infested town I had spent my entire life in suddenly felt different, dangerous. I would go to parties in houses that looked totally normal from the outside, but inside, would be filled with swords and coffins and goblets. It sounds cheesy now, but at the time, I desperately wanted to believe in the idea of an underbelly, even in a town as sleepy as mine. I felt so lucky to have found it.
At school, I went from being considered wacky to being mysterious overnight. Well, in truth, the biggest mystery to other kids was probably why I was dressing like the TJ Maxx version of "The Addams Family," but in my head, they thought of me as an enigma wrapped in mystery. I was no longer teased, so instead I ridiculed other kids who dared to wear fingerless gloves, insisting that they were poseurs.
Talking smack about people in a park where you used to ride bikes as a kid is a major pastime for goths, as is discussing rumors of bands that may be coming to town. See, the thing about being goth is that there's not much to do. We have no real pastime other than sweating in black clothes.
You can go to goth nights at clubs if you're lucky, so that's one night taken care of, and maybe once every other year, a goth or industrial band would tour. Even if we didn't like the band, we went anyway. That's how hard up we were.
Moving Toward the Light... Clothing
I dutifully carried on past high school, taking a glow-in-the-dark "art piece" of a head screaming in agony to my freshman year dorm room, instantly horrifying my hippie roommate. I found my fellow goths that first year of college, but I also met punks and shoegazer kids and metal kids, and they all seemed to have a pretty good racket going on. I found bands in my college town where the shows felt just as dramatic and underground and vital, and the kids were having fun.
I defected gradually, buying colorful clothing here, listening to Sleater-Kinney there. I grew up. Being goth is perfect for teenagers, because it's all about creating an illusion of a dark, dramatic world, keeping yourself isolated so no one breaks that illusion, and then complaining there's nothing cool to do.
I still listen to Skinny Puppy sometimes and think wistfully about the days when the world still seemed so mysterious and out of reach. If only I could have kept myself in the dark.
Emily Gordon is a Lemondrop contributor, blogger, journalist and recovering goth who lives in New York.
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Sunday 13 September
By CIN
Stephanie Murray- your are a very confused probably immature mother. YOU paid for your 13 yr old to dye his hair purple? YOU helped him paint his nails black? YOU helped him pin his clothes? YOU are also helping him attract other confused goths. YOU should be helping him learn guitar, piano, tennis, dramma, the drums, soccer, baseball or the joy of reading, ect. The look he chooses should be of his own hand, not yours.........YOU need to grow up and be a mom instead of just a "friend"!!!
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Sunday 13 September
By noname
Are you for real????? Everything you mentioned is superficial! Cosmetic! No different than getting a little bold with painting the walls to your kitchen RED because you feel like it! It doesn't make you white trailor trash or lower the value of your home! My kids are ages 14 & 16. Both are popular, do good in school. play sports, pay instruments hang out with friends, pretty typical! Neither one of them do drugs, drink or smoke although A LOT of their friends do. Both my kids (boy & a girl) like to paint their nails black! And big surprise I have paid for their polish & yep, even helped them paint them! My kids change their hair color when they feel like it. ITS HAIR! Who cares? And yes, I've helped them do that as well! Let them express themselves! It doesn't make them bad people or ME a bad parent. Yes I am their friend! AND their Mom. And yes I am my husbands friend. AND his wife. I'm also my dogs friend AND his owner! Why do any of the above bother you? You've got some screwed up thoughts here!! Hide behind your damn white picket fence. Be sure & keep your closet doors CLOSED! Those damn skeletons WILL come out when you least expect it! I feel sorry for your kids!
Sunday 13 September
By djpinklady
lame story.
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Sunday 13 September
By suzi
what is wrong with being Goth? You hung your head in shame? Then you are another brainwashed idiot! You hang your head in shame when you steal, betray, or act in a cruel manner!!!! Not because you dyed your hair pink! WTF is that? I work for the govt as a scientist and still wear chucks, have a blue streak in my hair and a full sleeve of tattoos. Why do you have to follow the norm way of dressing? It wasn't NORM 100 years ago lol...It's what the person does everyday and how you treat your fellow inhabitants of this planet that counts...Whoa, I can't believe people still think like this...
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Sunday 13 September
By Lauren
Sounds like the author has a frame of reference as small as her town. I was a teenage goth, and my friends were artists, writers, activists, and one of them was a particularly devout Catholic who's now cloistered and FORCED to wear black every day. We sat around and listened to music and complained about our conservative city, but that's not atypical for teenagers in general. We'd go to see old movies and attend poetry readings sometimes. It was never about moping and complaining in the corner. We'd talk about philosophy and books and politics and I learned a lot about Eastern European history, actually.
It was a form of self-expression and most of us found it enriching to acknowledge the beauty in darkness, the duality of nature. We were mocked for being Devil-worshippers and all the other dumb goth stereotypes, but we were pretty happy in general. Just different and too proud to conform to a mainstream clique that was pretty ugly in itself, the tight jeans and midriffs, the gossip and judgment, the keggers and promiscuity.
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Sunday 13 September
By Njoy
I teach teens and I have seen this happen again and again. I am all for originality and going against the mob mentality of dressing like stamped out/Xeroxed clones...good point about being unable to develop a strong personality of your own and therefore borrowing an easily reproducible one. Teens are all trying on different costumes, desperate to figure out who they are. We all did that in some way. My question is, was there anything that a trusted teacher, adult friend, or parent could say that got your attention or made you reconsider?
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Sunday 13 September
By Moovyz
I'm so glad that I'm old enough to be able to say... "wtf was I thinking" but I was talking about long hair, bell-bottom jeans, tie-dyed shirts and listened to Classic rock like Led Zepplin, Eric Clapton and Pink Floyd. My youth felt full and lively. I'm not trying to belittle the author but Goth seems so shallow... there's no substance. All my music survived. My clothing makes a comeback every few years. But I never heard of one of the bands here and the black clothes with pink hair???? I guess everyone needs a clique in their youth. But kids should shop around a bit more.
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Sunday 13 September
By katelyn
ok seriously why does it matter that in high school you were goth? it was years ago and the guy shouldn't care about that and neither should you. everyone does something they regret later but trying to act like its some awful thing because you wore black is kidna dumb.
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Sunday 13 September
By Sam Rackham
So you got into a weird fad back in your HS days. Big deal. Nobody cares. It's how you ultimately turned out that matters. What a non-story.
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Sunday 13 September
By faye07217
I, too, was a goth in high school--back in the early nineties when that was still a REALLY strange thing to be--and I thank my lucky stars every day that there are few photos of me during that sad and pathetic time of my life. Yes, my husband knows; I've even listened to The Cure and Bauhaus in the minivan while on family excursions, but he's never seen a photo of me in my Robert Smith clone phase and here's hoping he never will. He'll die laughing.
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Sunday 13 September
By Heather
Seriously? This is the stupidest thing I've ever read. Who cares what you were in high school, and why should you have to hide it from anyone? I was a teenage goth too. I loved it. I would never deny it, and even at 28, I'm still pretty goth, though not as hardcore as I was back in the day. Lemondrop must be pretty hard up for stories of they're publishing this crap.
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Sunday 13 September
By missie
hi . I was reading your story and girl , if that is the only thing in your closet dont worry about it , everyone goes through that kind of a phase in high school. I even went through that , black hair, lips, nails, shoes, everything . lol and I am 30 now. I dont know why you would be embaressed about how you dressed in high school. it's all about change , expressing yourself.. You should not be embaressed ... just be llike yeah I was goth back in the day , and your point is ... ya know what I mean ? well have a nice day ... missie
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Sunday 13 September
By spagheddio
Nobody cares how you dressed in high school. You aren't that important.
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Sunday 13 September
By Lara
How in the world can this be considered 'news' of ANY sort? This story isn't even worth telling others at the family dinner table. It's a non-event. This is just laziness - come up with something interesting and at least semi-newsworthy.
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Sunday 13 September
By kogkoh
WHY IS SHE ASHAMED OF THE GOTH LOOK? I DON'T HAVE A PROBLEM WITH IT AT ALL AND I AM 40 SOMETHING. IN FACT WHERE I AM EMPLOYED, WE HAVE BAT DAY. SOME OF YOU MAY KNOW WHERE I AM A CAST MEMBER;)
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Sunday 13 September
By eric
this is a news story???
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Sunday 13 September
By K-chan
Ok,
As a former goth kid in high school, I was disappointed that this woman would put something so trivial up. I was expecting to read that she had previously been a porn star or a prostitute or maybe even an addict. Perhaps something truly shocking. How is being a goth, way back when, as it were, really all that shocking? I live in the southeast, where the summers get unbearably hot, but I still wore the full length trench coats and carried around a black umbrella to shield me from the sun. I find those times amusing, and joke about them with older goth friends who still call me "gothling," but I'm never ashamed of my gothic stylings. This is ridiculous. Boring woman who still needs attention. If your fiance is really that shallow, then tell him to go fuck himself. Give me a break.
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Sunday 13 September
By Brian
So what? Unless you did harm to anyone who cares how you dressed? You could have dressed like Lady Gaga for all it matters. Usually what we used to do is all good for a laugh. You could still do it, and if you're a good person I wouldn't care. Sounds like you're with a holier-than-thou type, which is worse to me that goth.
And no, I don't dress funny, I just have an open mind.
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Sunday 13 September
By Shaina
I like how some people call it a "phase" as if goth isn't actually a subculture. No offense, but I've been apart of this culture for 6 years, love the music, love the people, love the scene, love the shows, and I personally don't plan to leave it or feel embarrassed about it when I talk about it with my boyfriend.
I have to agree with Lauren, you really have a short frame of mind on goth, and while your life revolved around making fun of other kids going through the same thing (which is petty and sad) and talking about BS when you were in it, that only accounts for such a small iota of goths in the scene that its actually funny (and often that small amount refers to the many teenagers who hang on to this dying subculture for a sense of identity and individuality they can't achieve on their own).
And since when was Industrial music goth? What the fuck?
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Sunday 13 September
By AC
Awwwww, don't sweat what you did in your youth. That's the time to do those things, 'cause you sure can't do it as an adult. I had hair down to my azz in my twentys. Now, what I have left is mostly gray. I love my old pictures. I show them to new friends so they know I wasn't always an old guy.
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