Sure, now, when I look to the right of my bedroom door, I see the light-switch for what it is-- a light-switch, inanimate, with absolutely no potential to cause me harm.
But, at eleven years old, a light-switch is a breeding ground for plethoras of girl-hungry microorganisms waiting to infect me with some vile, incurable illness.
In the sixth grade, I wash my hands the same way I would eventually come to write poetry-- obsessively, with reckless abandon and, most importantly, with the insatiable desire to escape.
I flick on the light-switch and I wash my hands
I touch the door handle and I wash my hands
I just come out of the shower and I wash my hands
I learn what a ******* is at school one day and I wash my hands
I think of *** for the first time (I enjoy it) and I wash my hands (I regret it)
I believe God must be angry with me so I wash my hands
I wash my hands. with tedious precaution so as not to miss a single palm line or fingernail.
I wash my hands until my skin splits like volcanic rock, until dew drops of lava clot across my knuckles, until I've sacrificed every last bit of my flesh in my attempt at purification.
I wash my hands until it hurts to eat. write. pray.
(But in four years, I will have stopped praying altogether, anyway.)