Phobias and How They Actually Can Ruin Your Life
I had thought about writing a post kind of like this one when I heard about that cruise ship that had been overrun by the norovirus, but I thought it might be better to let you all keep thinking that I am a totally sane and mentally stable individual. Well, tonight, I’m saying “to heck with it,” and I’m just going to tell you.
I have a phobia. Of vomit.
I’ve mentioned before that I don’t handle it well. That’s a lie. I don’t handle it at all. You know how some people are so deathly afraid of spiders that they can’t handle being in the same room as one? That’s how I am with puke (but in case you’re wondering, I’m totally fine with spiders).
I know a lot of people will try to empathize and say, “Oh, I get grossed out too,” but it’s not the same. I get grossed out when I see a bug or when someone sneezes without covering their mouth. When regurgitation, it’s an entirely different reaction. Long story short, you can’t get me away fast enough. My irrational and admittedly ridiculous fear of people throwing up around me can be crippling.
I won’t go into details about it because, quite frankly, the details are disgusting. No one likes being sick or being around people who are sick, but it was actually really big issues for me in high school. I have gotten (a little) better about it as I’ve gotten older, but tonight, I’m afraid I feel a relapse coming on, and I’ll tell you why.
My mom and I had plans to go see a musical tomorrow at my sister’s old high school. A lot of her friends are in it and since she can’t go, we wanted to at least make an appearance, go support her friends, and it’s Sherk the Musical. I’ve been wanting to see that for ages!
However, about thirty minutes ago, she called to inform me that her Twitter feed was exploding with reports of the #Plague going around her high school. It just so happens that #Plague = STOMACH FLU. The really bad kind that hits you without warning and spreads like wildfire. If reports are to be believed, dozens of kids were sent home this afternoon. They were literally dropping like flies.
As I’m listening to her reports of the #Plague, I can actually feel myself pulling away from the phone, as though just talking about it will somehow infect me. I’m trying really hard to remind myself that I haven’t been exposed and that I am meticulous about my hand-washing and personal hygiene, but it’s not doing me a lot of good (hence me complaining about it to all of you here online).
You can probably guess where this is going. Thanks to this virus, I am absolutely terrified of setting foot in that auditorium this weekend. It’s like asking an arachnophobe to go sit in a room infested with spiders for three hours. Although I am fairly certain no one will get sick in the theater, I am convinced the entire place will be crawling with germs with the potential to make me sick. Yeah, the fear of puke doesn’t just apply to people puking around me. I’m equally (if not more) terrified of catching it myself. I will do whatever it takes to avoid getting sick. I am a stickler when it comes to expiration dates. I won’t eat certain things at certain restaurants. I’ve never had more than two alcoholic drinks together in my life because I am so scared of hangovers and throwing up. And I certainly make it a priority to avoid sick people and places where I know people have been sick.
People ask me all the time if I based any of my characters in Cemetery Tours off of myself. The answer is usually “no,” but the truth is that I base certain aspects of all my characters’ quirks and traits off of my own. For those of you who’ve read Cemetery Tours, you’ll know that Kate, my female protagonist, is something of a germ-a-phobe. That’s her little bit of me. I am a germ-a-phobe. Actually, the technical term is “Emetophobe,” because I don’t have a fear of catching colds (though I really hate them) or even the seasonal flu (though that sucks also), just the stomach stuff.
I don’t want to not go see this musical that I’ve been looking forward to for so long, but I’m going to have to really get a grip on my anxieties if I’m going to make it through the whole three hours. That, and pack a LOT of hand-sanitizer. And maybe a breathing mask. And gloves.
Heck, I just need to go like this.
Then I might make it through the show.
In other news, Cemetery Tours got another great review on Amazon.
I’m still having a lot of fun with the sequel. I’ve also really been in a de-cluttering mood, so I’ve been cleaning out shelves and drawers and trying to transform my home into something you’d seen on Pinterest.
That’s all I’ve got for tonight. I hope everyone stays healthy, because if you’re not, then I do not want to be around you.

