Somewhere, buried deep in the archives of my digital past, is a tweet from 2014 that simply reads:
“I don’t get why girls take an hour to get ready. Like, just throw on a hoodie and go.”
Reader, I was lying.
It took everything in me to post that—deliberately, calculatingly, knowing full well that I had spent 52 minutes working mousse into my hair, trying to get that perfect bed head look. But the male gaze, that omnipresent, all-seeing force, demanded I pretend otherwise. I was in my Pick-Me era, and I wore it like a badge of honor.
For the uninitiated (which, let’s be honest, is probably no one), a Pick-Me Girl is a woman who aggressively rejects stereotypically “feminine” traits in a desperate attempt to appear cool, chill, and desirable to men. Think, “I don’t even cry at movies” (but sobs into a pillow at night). Think, “I just get along with guys better” (but secretly wants every female to like her just as much as she wants every male to like her). Think, “Ugh, I hate drama” (but is the first one taking screenshots in the group chat).
I was that girl. I was her, she was me, and together, we were exhausting.
The Rise and Fall of a Pick-Me Girl
At the height of my delusion, I was the type to fake-laugh at every mediocre joke a guy made, especially if it involved sports references I didn’t understand. I once went on a date where I pretended to love whiskey even though it tasted like an arsonist’s cologne. I spent hours reading about sports on Wiki and researching boy-songs so I could properly hum them. I wore sneakers to parties, not because they were comfortable, but because heels were too girly. And I had to prove I was “one of the boys.”
My biggest crime? I actively slandered women who wore fake eyelashes and wore contour. Only to try to blend my nose into non-existence later that year in secrecy. The cognitive dissonance was staggering.
The Awakening (Or, How I Finally Got a Grip)
There was no singular moment when I snapped out of it, no cinematic montage where I burned my snapbacks and stopped saying “girls are too much drama.” But there were cracks in the Pick-Me façade—small moments that started the unraveling:
A Guy Told Me I Wasn’t Like Other Girls—And Meant It as an Insult.
One fateful day, mid-conversation, a man looked me dead in the eye and said, “You’re so different. Most girls are just… annoying.”
Ah. So that’s what I had signed up for. A lifetime of being the exception, only to be discarded the moment I showed a “girl-like” emotion? Stunning.
The ‘Chill Girl’ Act Became a Full-Time Job.
The worst part about being a Pick-Me? The unpaid labor. Constantly curating my personality to fit the male ideal was exhausting. I had to pretend to hate brunch (even though I love a good overpriced avocado toast). I had to pretend to love action movies (even though I’d rather die than sit through Fast & Furious 17: Vin Diesel’s Retirement Plan).
Women Became My Safe Space.
One day, in a moment of pure, unfiltered, no-judgment joy, I admitted to a group of women that I secretly loved Taylor Swift. Instead of the scorn I had anticipated, I was met with enthusiasm, recommendations, and a 37-slide PowerPoint on the folklore–evermore cinematic universe.
It was in that moment that I realized: women weren’t the enemy. They were the blueprint. Guys on the other hand, were always competitive. Even with me. The constanct comeuppance was exhausting. I don't care about being the biggest know-it-all on whiskey, thanks.
And what did it all get me anyway? Boys didn't care about me. Or love me. Or anything. I was just. There.
Post-Pick-Me Life: A Redemption Arc
These days, I no longer contort myself for male approval. I embrace my right to be loud, dramatic, and infuriatingly complex. I openly adore glitter eyeshadow. I voice my opinions even when they make men uncomfortable. I no longer feel the need to whisper, “I actually love rom-coms”, as if confessing to a federal crime.
And most importantly, I’ve learned that being ‘one of the boys’ was never the flex I thought it was. Because, let’s be honest—have you seen how men live? One pillow. No bedsheets. 3-in-1 shampoo. Not a scented candle in sight.
I escaped the Pick-Me trap, and I will never look back.
Except, of course, when I need to quote this in therapy.
Moral of the story: love what you love, befriend women, and never, under any circumstances, fake a whiskey preference for a man who doesn’t even own real plates.
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