She opened her laptop. The loading wheel spun. Then, the notifications: 17 new comments on a photo of you.
She was nineteen. On a Tuesday night in November, she wore a sequined top from Forever 21 and drank UV Blue vodka mixed with cheap lemonade. The photos appeared on Facebook by 11:00 PM. By 1:00 AM, the tags were up. By 8:00 AM, the damage was done. shame -2011
She hit "Untag." But the damage was already syndicated. Someone had already screenshotted it. Someone had already sent it to the "Ugly Candid" group chat on BBM. The shame wasn't guilt. Guilt was about doing something bad. Shame was about being something bad. And in 2011, you were what your profile said you were. She opened her laptop
The shame remained—a low-grade fever behind her ribs. Because she knew that somewhere, on a hard drive or a cloud that didn't quite feel like a cloud yet, that bad photo still existed. Waiting. Like a scar she hadn't earned, but couldn't shake. End of draft. She was nineteen
The shame hit not during the act—she barely remembered the act—but in the 8:00 AM walk of shame, clutching her platform heels against her chest, the autumn air biting her bare legs. But the real shame wasn't the walk. It was the refresh.
She deleted the whole album. Then she wrote a status: "So over drama. Going private. #hatersgonnahate."