It's Kind of a Funny Story
familiar with it.”
    “How long have you had feelings like that, Craig?”
    “Since last year, mostly.”
    “What about before then?”
    “Well . . . I’ve had them for years. Just less intense. I thought they were, you know, just part of growing up.”
    “Suicidal feelings.”
    I nodded.
    Dr. Barney stared at me, his lips puckered. What was he so serious about? Who hasn’t thought about killing themselves, as a kid? How can you grow up in this world and not think about it? It’s an option taken by a lot of successful people: Ernest Hemingway, Socrates, Jesus. Even before high school, I thought that it would be a cool thing to do if I ever got really famous. If I kept making my maps, for instance, and some art collector came across them and decided to make them worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, if I killed myself at the height of that, they’d be worth millions of dollars, and I wouldn’t be responsible for them anymore. I’d have left behind something that spoke for itself, like the Brooklyn Bridge.
    “I thought . . . you haven’t really lived until you’ve contemplated suicide,” I said. “I thought like it would be good to have a reset switch, like on the video games, to start again and see if you could go a different way.”
    Dr. Barney said, “It sounds as if you’ve been battling this depression for a long time.”
    I stopped. No I hadn’t. . .Yes I had.
    Dr. Barney said nothing.
    Then he said, “You have a flat affect.”
    “What’s that?”
    “You’re not expressing a lot of emotion about these things.”
    “Oh. Well. They’re too big.”
    “I see. Let’s talk a little about your family.”
    “Mom designs postcards; Dad works in health insurance,” I said.
    “They’re together?”
    “Yes.”
    “Any brothers or sisters?”
    “One sister. Younger. Sarah. She’s worried about me.”
    “How so?”
    “She’s always asking me whether I’m good or bad, and when I tell her I’m bad she says, ‘Craig, please get better, everyone is trying.’Things like that. It breaks my heart.”
    “But she cares.”
    “Yeah.”
    “Your family supports you coming here?”
    “When I told them about it they didn’t waste any time. They say it’s a chemical imbalance, and if I get the right drugs for it, I’ll be fine.” I looked around the office at the names of the right drugs. If I got prescribed every drug that Dr. Barney repped, I’d be like an old man counting out pills every morning.
    “You’re in high school, correct?”
    “Yes.”
    “And your sister?”
    “Fourth grade.”
    “You realize there are a lot of parental consent forms that need to be filled out for us to help you—”
    “They’ll sign everything. They want me to get better.”
    “Supportive family environment,” Dr. Booth scratched on his pad. He turned and gave his version of a smile, which was a slight affirmative, the lips barely curled, the lower lip out in front.
    “We’re going to get through this, Craig. Now, from a personal standpoint, why do you think you have this depression?”
    “I can’t compete at school,” I said. “All the other kids are too much smarter.”
    “What’s the name of your high school?”
    “Executive Pre-Professional High School.”
    “Right. I’ve heard of it. Lots of homework.”
    “Yeah. When I come home from school, I know I have all this work to do, but then my head starts the Cycling.”
    “The Cycling.’”
    “Going over the same thoughts over and over. When my thoughts race against each other in a circle.”
    “Suicidal thoughts?”
    “No, just thoughts of what I have to do. Homework. And it comes up to my brain and I look at it and think ‘I’m not going to be able to do that’and then it cycles back down and the next one comes up. And then things come up like ‘You should be doing more extracurricular activities’because I should, I don’t do near enough, and that gets pushed down and it’s replaced with the big one: ‘What college are you

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