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Mia Doring Ste Murray

Extract 'She is funny and puts herself down, but in a funny way, so it’s okay'

Mia Döring shares an extract from the new Sunday Miscellany: A Selection 2018-2023 which is nominated in the An Post Irish Book Awards TheJournal.ie’s sponsored category.

I wrote this piece, not really realising it was a “piece”, in the early exploration of writing my memoir Any Girl. I was writing short vignettes about this and that and seeing where they took me. Some developed into something that was funnelled into the book and some didn’t, like this piece.

It was a choppy rushing out of words as I stepped back into my teenage years and the pain and beauty therein. The courage and fragility, the vulnerability and insecurity. It didn’t fit anywhere in the book, in the lyrical, poetic form it had taken, and I left it sitting in a folder for a couple of years.

I was mooching around in that chaotic ‘writing’ folder one day and came across it and thought, you know, other people might relate to this, and actually, I want to read this out loud, and sent it to Sarah (Binchy, editor/producer of Sunday Miscellany).

SHE WAS PLAIN brown hair and weighs eleven stone, which she finds repulsive. In her diaries: poetry and drawings. Over blue Bic pen swirls of horses’ manes, she has written, over and over, lists of things she must achieve: lose weight, stop eating, get a boyfriend.

Be interesting. Nothing is enough. Nothing she can offer is enough. Nothing she has to give is enough.

She helps, she is afraid, she wants to be useful. She hovers. She hopes.

She writes gratitude lists. She apologises, she says sorry, she excuses herself.

Playing, as a child, she had to be urged by adults to take part. One time, a friend’s mother overheard her talking to a doll as if the doll was a real baby. She and the friend’s mother made brief, sudden eye contact as the mother smiled her way up the stairs of her home. Shame stung and suffocated, and although she continued playing in that house, she would never let go to that extent again, she would never lose control like that again.

And then the time came for parents to stop organising playdates, and then the time came for street playing to stop, and although she didn’t know it then, one summer day she called into neighbours for the last time, she eventually played her last play in the green, cycled her last cycle home.

9781848409040 (1)

She makes up fake social activities so she doesn’t look like a loser, even though she isn’t a loser and isn’t even sure what a ‘loser’ is, anyway. She befriends the outcasts, the unpopular, the unwanted, the laughed at, the excluded. She goes on walks with them at lunchtime and feels sorry for them, like she is a charity worker, and also grateful, so grateful, for them.

‘A softie’

Her heart aches with empathy and she wishes she wasn’t so soft. Such a pushover. So weak. She wishes she had a bit of the edge and harshness some 308 of the Cool Girls have, some of their bite. She will never have their bite. She does have bite, she doesn’t realise she has bite. She will get bite eventually.

She relinquishes this desire and tries to forge her own identity but finds it hard to know who she is.

She has never got to know herself. She doesn’t know how to begin. The who of her has never been heard. The sight of her has never been seen.

She maintains a façade that keeps her safe. She orchestrates, she shows off, she humblebrags, she overachieves, she pretends, and she aches, she aches and she works hard, she does her best. She is doing her best and always feels like she is doing her worst. She is funny and puts herself down, but in a funny way, so it’s okay.

She carries inexplicable guilt and the weight of it takes the lightness out of her eyes. She takes the blame for unearned misdemeanours in order to alleviate this guilt. She doesn’t know why she does that. Her friends are baffled so she makes out like she is a martyr and sacrificing herself and no one can say anything then.

She is privileged, and she knows she is, she carries the guilt. She is soft and sensitive and she watches, watches, watches. Her intuition is deep and deft, but she doesn’t know it yet, can’t separate out sensitivity and intuition. She has friends, she doesn’t trust the friendships, she doesn’t know what friendship is.

At lunch in school, she asks her group, what are we doing at the weekend, and someone replies, who’s we? and she doesn’t say another thing, doesn’t try again to say another thing.

She watches others. She accepts her cues. She knows she is a leader but follows anyway. She knows she is strong but pretends to be weak, steps behind and into shadows out of fear of her own light, for fear of what the power of it could do.

She is aware, somewhere, that all this fragmentation and insecurity is normal, just normal, and she knows that many others have it far, far worse. But everywhere she looks she is the odd one, the soft one, the silly one, the stupid one. She is far from stupid.

Teenager by Mia Döring was first broadcast on Sunday Miscellany, RTÉ Radio 1 and is included in Sunday Miscellany: A Selection 2018-2023, which has just been published by New Island. It is nominated in the An Post Irish Book Awards 2023 in TheJournal.ie’s sponsored category, Best Irish Published Book of the Year. Find the full list of nominees and more information at the awards’ website. You can vote here anpostirishbookawards.ie/vote.

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9 Comments
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    Mute mcgoo
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:05 AM

    Lads, it’s been emotional. See ye in 20 years when we lose the run of ourselves again.

    245
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    Mute mcgoo
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:36 AM

    Please accept this gift on behalf of the Irish people of 450 three bed semi d’s, 1200 apartments, 3 hotels and a partridge in a pear tree.

    137
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    Mute Catriona Harpin
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    Oct 29th 2013, 10:12 AM

    Lol lol love it

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    Mute Declan Conway
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    Oct 29th 2013, 11:19 AM

    20 years?…that’s optimistic.

    Instead of arriving every quarter they’ll be back twice a year until our debts are paid off, which is reckoned to be sometime in the late 2040s – if we have strong enough economic growth, inflation etc.

    On through the fog….

    27
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    Mute Sam WTF Rockwell
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    Oct 29th 2013, 12:10 PM

    We all partied blah, blah, blah …

    22
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    Mute Dermot Ryan
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    Oct 29th 2013, 1:34 PM

    Note to Government Hacks;
    Could you please let the Irish people know where it says that a lender of last resort can become the Government of First ? …………

    13
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    Mute rodrigo detriano
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:08 AM

    Can’t really see what the big deal is. All we’re doing is changing lenders. We still owe a couple of hundred billion.

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    Mute O'Reilly
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:17 AM

    But you’ve made such a big deal about our loss of sovereignty. Just as we are about to get it back, now you say “so what”. Typical of the whingers here…

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    Mute rodrigo detriano
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:24 AM

    O’Reilly. Sure we’re getting our sovereignty back, but at what price? Noonan and co decided to saddle the Irish people with bank debt in order to get our sovereignty back. Deal of the century or what!!

    77
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    Mute Norman Hunter
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:25 AM

    Sovereignty is gone, the fiscal treaty was passed.The IMF will still have a say as long as 75% of the loan is outstanding.

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    Mute O'Reilly
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:34 AM

    You guys are what’s known as a moving Target…Yet to accept any of the progress made. It makes you wonder about motives which look more & more about tribal politics. In other words, no matter what the gov party’s do, it will never be enough…

    32
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    Mute Norman Hunter
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:36 AM

    O Reilly is any of my comment untrue?

    39
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    Mute Leonard Washington
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:42 AM

    No progress was. Made the can was kicked down the road they’ll be back for another pound of flesh.

    46
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    Mute rodrigo detriano
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:57 AM

    O’Reilly. The Government are only worried about protecting themselves and their big shot buddies. All they have done since coming to power is pass on the consequences of greed to the little people.

    48
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    Mute Mike Clinton
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    Oct 29th 2013, 9:05 AM

    Oh hark at the minister for smarmy trolls o’reilly has awoken.

    32
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    Mute Peter Richardson
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    Oct 29th 2013, 9:07 AM

    Be real. We are not getting our sovereignty back. We will still have to continue with Troika conditions, adgphere to their austerity poison and will continue to be vulnerable to the markets.

    As a grossly excessive borrowed nation, Ireland has very little real autonomy. The only autonomy we have is to decide not to increase income taxes on the super wealthy and on the very high income earners. We also have the autonomy to preserve large pensions for politicians and the judiciary.

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    Mute Dermot Ryan
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    Oct 29th 2013, 1:37 PM

    The fiscal treaty was not passed ; There was only one referendum; there is a long-established tradition in Ireland of European Treaties requiring a second plebiscite for complete ratification , a new Government can call a second referendum on it any time they want to !

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    Mute Ryan Ash
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    Oct 29th 2013, 2:04 PM

    A large portion of the “couple of hundred billion” debt comes not from the bank bailouts, but the accumulated deficits built up since 2007 as well as government debt carried over from before then.

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    Mute Coddler O Toole
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    Oct 29th 2013, 3:50 PM

    Ryan,

    Ireland was actually running a budget surplus in the years leading up to the bank bailout and our total government debt was about €47 billion in 2007. I think we were the least publically indebted county in the Eurozone.
    We have moved from this stable position to owing the monstrous sum of €215 billion.
    The main reason for this is that the true cost of the bank bailout is over €113 billion and most of it has been added to the national debt.
    The National Pension Reserve Fund and general exchequer fund were raided for €17.5 billion and transferred to the European Financial Stability Facility & Mechanism (EFSF&M) funds. The EU then generously allowed us to borrow €67.5 billion from the EFSF&M which we are paying back with interest. €64 billion of this has been used directly cover private and illegitimate banking debt. In this way the EU gets to have the eurozone banking system stabilized at the expense of the Irish people and we get to pay for the privilege via the interest we pay on the debt. This does not include the €32 billion also borrowed that we have pumped into NAMA to indirectly prop up the banks by taking the bad commercial property loans off their books. Adding the 3 figures together (17.5 + 64 +32) gives a total cost of around €113 billion and counting for the bank bailout so far. Most of this money has been borrowed and the interest payments make up a major component of our current annual budget deficits

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    Mute Stephen McMahon
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:47 AM

    This just means they are gonna take off the latex gloves :) Still gonna effectively call the shots. It’s my sons I feel most sorry for, they never even saw the Celtic Tiger but will pay for it for years. F U Bertie and Biffo

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    Mute Patrick Mc Mullin
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:54 AM

    The tiger was only ever seen by a few those with their hands in the pie. The rest unfortunately we’re sold a dream that couldn’t last. I am thankful that even during the tiger I was not earning enough to qualify for any of the mad money. A lucky escape

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    Mute Dermot Ryan
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    Oct 29th 2013, 1:45 PM

    Initial financing[edit]
    The money to launch The Irish Press was raised in the United States during the Irish War of Independence by a bond drive to finance the First Dail. The amount raised was $5 million ($55 million adjusted for inflation as of 2011).[3] However, 60 percent of this money was left in various banks in New York. Nobody has been able to explain why Éamon de Valera ordered the bulk of the money to be left in New York when he returned to Ireland in late 1920.[4] In 1927, as a result of legal action between the Irish Free State government and de Valera, a court in New York ordered that the bond holders be paid back outstanding money due to them. However de Valera’s legal team had anticipated the ruling and had prepared for the outcome. A number of circulars were sent to the bond holders asking them to sign over their holdings to de Valera. The bond holders were paid 58 cents to the dollar. This money was then used as start up capital to launch The Irish Press.[4] Following the 1933 Irish General Election de Valera used his Dáil majority to pass a measure allowing the bond holders to be paid the remaining 42 percent of the money still owed.

    Bondholders etc. have been doing very well out of Ireland for years ! DEV was their Baby !

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    Mute Dermot Ryan
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    Oct 29th 2013, 1:46 PM

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Irish_Press
    apologies link for above script referenced ; where is the editing function on this blog?

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    Mute Hugh Diamond
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:01 AM

    Really………. Last little pat on the head for Enda then so….

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    Mute Shane Griffin
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:26 AM

    Does this mean we can all come home now ? I’m in New Zealand, heaps more in Aussie and all over the world I would imagine

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    Mute Rísteard Ó Muineacháin
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:33 AM

    Yes. Come home.

    18
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    Mute Jason Culligan
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:33 AM

    Try again in 20 years when the Troika is really gone. They will still be meddling in Irish affairs until the loan is paid off.

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    Mute Ryan'O
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    Oct 29th 2013, 10:58 AM

    20 years…..your optimistic.

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    Mute richardmccarthy
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:46 AM

    This is the last visit of the Troika ?, with the interest bill this year alone on our bailout debt at well over eight billion euro, who would bet on it.

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    Mute Fong Wannapho
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:45 AM

    They must be having a right laugh, no, you don’t need another bailout, but you’re about as shaky as a giraffe on stilts.

    38
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    Mute Stephen
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:41 AM

    So our plan on hoping they would forget didn’t work then ?

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    Mute Right Wing Steve ©
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    Oct 29th 2013, 7:52 AM

    Lets get them a few pints in Kehoe’s later on

    34
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    Mute Ronnie Maher
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    Oct 29th 2013, 10:07 AM

    No..I can’t afford it !!

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    Mute Right Wing Steve ©
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    Oct 29th 2013, 10:17 AM

    I will lend you the money, it does come with some conditions though

    17
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    Mute Daithi O' Regan
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:12 AM

    I hope the door doesn’t hit them on their way out.

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    Mute james r
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    Oct 29th 2013, 10:02 AM

    Pure nonsense !! You’d think ireland was debt free they way they spin this troika is going no where !! Enda thinks were all stupid .. Least we forget he put €28.000 debt on all our heads and or nation for the next 40 yrs . Traitors

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    Mute Leonard Washington
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:40 AM

    Oh don’t worry they’ll be back in a few months, maybe a year, but just remember they left us with a nice sizeable debt…

    29
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    Mute Liam H
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:43 AM

    A debt that grew by 20 billion in the last year even though the government took 4 billion out of the economy.

    Interest on loans in the hundreds of billions is crazy especially when it is compounded.

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    Mute Leonard Washington
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    Oct 29th 2013, 8:59 AM

    Right by the short and curlies…

    And these fools can’t see what’s really going on…

    Not enough young smart politicians

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    Mute Fergal Reid
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    Oct 29th 2013, 9:14 AM

    You’d swear we were the first country in history to accept an IMF loan with the wailing and gnashing of teeth here. This is a step in the right direction. It will be good to exit the bailout. The government has kept things at a reasonably even keel. Stop tearing your hair out.

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    Mute Anti_Social_Network
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    Oct 29th 2013, 10:05 AM

    People in debt are trapped, forced into servile repaymants to mafia banks, and cannot sell up and escape. Government fodder! Eco tax rises anyone?

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    Mute Shane Mullally
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    Oct 29th 2013, 9:42 AM

    We will be saddled with this Hugh debt for the next 30 years-question is will this nation have learned a lesson?..there’s no such thing as a free lunch…

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    Mute james r
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    Oct 29th 2013, 10:33 AM

    Free lunch you must be talking bout banksters and bondholders or TDs .

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    Mute Jack Daniels
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    Oct 29th 2013, 1:32 PM

    Didnt read the article had a look at the picture though and all i see is a traitor and a criminal .

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    Mute Anti_Social_Network
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    Oct 29th 2013, 10:03 AM

    Hey the goodfellas are in town.

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    Mute John Clarke
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    Oct 29th 2013, 2:58 PM

    Thank you to the Troika and the FG/LAB Government for placing a noose around the necks of generations of future Irish citizens. Farewell Troika, thanks a bunch.

    8
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