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Lionel Shriver’s teenage diary: bad spelling and unreturned affections

Written By Unknown on Wednesday, June 8, 2016 | 5:22 AM

The We Need to Talk About Kevin author is laying bare her adolescent self for Radio 4. Here, she talks about her refusal to go to church and her years-long crush on a boy called Roger

In my teens, I eyed my adulthood with trepidation, as if stalked by a stranger – one who would seize control as if by demonic possession and regard my fledgling incarnation with contempt. I was terrified of growing up to become the anti-me, maturing into a woman whom I would not recognise, and who wouldn’t recognise her younger self. I doubt I was alone as a teenager in seeing adulthood as a lurking betrayal, an impending death. That may be one reason teen suicide rates are so high: for many adolescents, growing up presents itself as a form of bereavement anyway, so it seems as if there’s nothing to lose.

Asked to fill the painfully comic Radio 4 slot My Teenage Diary, I scrambled into my attic recently to dig up the damp, furry-cardboard covers of the journals I began keeping when I was 12. Before rereading them for the first time in 40-some years, I worried that I would be embarrassed. Instead, I was infuriated.

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