I never had skin tags before. But now I have one too prominent to ignore, and two smaller friends beginning to form on my neck. Google tells me it’s likely due to friction—clothing and jewelry rubbing against the skin. I look at my jewelry box and closet with horror and suspicion. Or maybe it’s aging. Or genetics.
I am older. I remember my mother having a few around her neck—one of those things I egotistically assumed would never happen to me. Like dry skin on the bottoms of your feet. Or flabby arms.
But alas, like everything else I believed about my future as a child, I was wrong. Now there is a skin tag big enough to freeze off. I have the kit. I’ve read the instructions. I just haven’t yet. But it does need to go, even if its two little friends will grow and replace it in no time.
It’s like how, for years—years on years on years, folded on top of more years—I haven’t really been plagued with many new thoughts. Sure, I’ve had new issues. Grappled with feelings. Made goals. Worked. Succeeded. Failed. All that. But thoughts? Recurring new thoughts that linger, rubbing, pressing into my brain? No. Not in years.
Yes, I’ve had those tired, old thoughts that pop into my head. The negative ones programmed in childhood, surfacing at the worst moments. That I’m unlovable. That I ruin everything. But these aren’t new thoughts. They fade into the noise of my brain and my life—like crumbs on the counter, brushed into the trash. Until panic strikes and another preprogrammed thought appears.
But now this is a new thought. I wake at 3 a.m. with a new thought, a new fear, rubbing on my brain—the kind of friction that could cause a mental skin tag in just a week.
Silly. I want to tell myself this is silly. Childish—to care about something like this. To cry about something so stupid at 3 a.m., quietly, of course, in bed. It’s probably the same thing men during the Depression thought about steaks. Or women in WWII missing silk stockings—after so long, unsure if they’d ever have them again. For some of them, it probably was never again. But most lived to see steak and stockings again and those thoughts ended. I might live that long too. I have faith I could be one of the lucky few.
If it even is lucky. WWII alleviated the Depression. The Atomic Bomb ended WWII. We humans often trade one pain for another. A new problem hidden in solution-wrapping paper, soon discarded, leaving only what’s inside. Then I rationalize: if I had some passionate tryst, what new struggles would it unlock? Like Pandora’s box, some things are best left unknown. Perhaps I am lucky to be without. Perhaps people in the past told themselves that too.
I chuckle through my tears as I hold a pillow tighter to my chest. Imagine my ego, my conceit, to compare a tongue uncaressed to starvation and war. Perhaps women drawing lines on their legs laughed too. Perhaps they reminded themselves that others had endured far worse than bare legs and no steak.
Are we only human? Wanting what we don’t have, then reminding ourselves of what we do. Leaning on progress like a crutch. I have it better than anyone in the past; therefore, it must be enough. I am wrong to want more. Always more. More. More. But isn’t the wanting of more how we progress?
A skin tag just mean I am older, wiser, connected to my mother. My neck is bathed in a wealth of 24k gold and Bandolino shirts. Isn't desire beyond my sufficiency just indulgent?
Behind all my rationalization: Still, this new thought—my new thought—unwanted, unnerving, unwelcome—enters my mind:
I’m unsure how to address it other than to wait for the mental skin tag to grow large enough to freeze off. Wait for another to grow in its place. Maybe, with time, it won’t be so prominent. Maybe it will become like crumbs on the counter—a thought easily discarded. Not a thought like a favorite necklace or shirt, rubbing a skin tag on to my neck.