Katie's Notebook

safety

Memoir Field Notes: The Gifted Years

Growing up, I didn’t just live in two worlds—I performed in them. By day, I was the gifted kid: violin captain, choir soloist, always somewhere between the spotlight and the edge of the room. I played in orchestras, sang in musicals, trained for four years in private voice, and never quite fit the mold I was handed.

I was the voice you could hear sticking out—sometimes even when it shouldn’t. But you only noticed if you were really listening. My violin skills were workmanlike, not prodigy-tier, and after a certain point I had to choose: music that moved my soul, or music that looked good on a college app. I chose singing, and the “journalism” I talk about now—my top secret project work, not the student paper—left no time to return to violin as an adult.

My high school graduation wasn’t just a local milestone. I was already part of an international family—two high schools, Marcela, and a network of allies and “relatives” from all over the world. I didn’t have a word for the privilege then, but I felt it: I was surrounded by people who understood what it meant to keep secrets, pass signals, and build safe corridors wherever we landed.

I grew up in a world where handing over consent was expected, especially if you were young, gifted, or different. But even then, I knew I had a network behind me that could help me break the system’s hold—not just for myself, but for everyone coming up behind me. Joe, Andrew, Jon—all military themselves—modeled a kind of safety logic I didn’t see in my school friends’ homes.

There were always two types of houses in my world: socially safe and military safe. Socially safe meant comfort, warmth, a sense of belonging—until something went wrong, and then it was every person for themselves. Military safe meant protocols, backup plans, and an understanding that privacy wasn’t a weakness, it was lifeblood.

Looking back, every club, every rehearsal, every late-night practice was about more than the music. It was about finding the people who knew how to read the room, spot the shifts, and hold the line when the world tried to make you drop it.

My giftedness was never the headline. The real story was learning how to survive systems that weren’t built for people like me—and carrying those lessons forward into every space I’d ever enter.

#memoir #gifted #music #voice #violin #survivor #fieldnotes #family #safety #consent #network

Beyond the Spotlight

From the outside, it probably looked like I belonged everywhere. Teachers marked me as “leadership material.” I was handed solos, asked to help others tune, recruited for every club that needed a ringer. In reality, I was always scanning—watching for the small social shifts that signaled danger, exclusion, or sudden coldness. Most people came to rehearsals to be seen. I came to survive.

Even the roles I played on stage had layers: I could sing with power and let the room believe I was confident, while inside I was counting exits and mapping which adults felt safe enough to ask for help. The attention sometimes made it easier, sometimes harder. If you stand out, you can hide behind your reputation. If you blend in, you’re less likely to be targeted. I learned to do both.

The Secret Curriculum

The real education wasn’t academic. It was the coded language passed between friends who’d been through their own wars at home, the look you exchanged with a teacher who noticed more than they let on, the hush that fell over a room when a certain adult walked in. Safety was never about popularity. It was about having people who’d vouch for you, intercept a threat, or quietly redirect attention when things got dicey.

I watched others hand over their stories too quickly and pay the price. I learned to answer questions with another question, to be helpful but not exposed, and to develop a “public script” that bought me time to think. All of that was rehearsal for the adult world, where boundaries would become more than personal preference—they’d become a requirement.

Legacy of the Gifted Program

There are people from those years I’ll never forget—not because of the music we made, but because of the silent understandings we shared. Sometimes I think the real “giftedness” was learning to survive in plain sight, to pass as ordinary when nothing in my world ever was.

I didn’t know it then, but I was already running dry runs for the Railroad, already practicing the art of holding multiple truths, already building a playbook that would serve me long after the music faded.

If I could go back and talk to that kid—violin in hand, choir binder under one arm—I’d tell her: the skills you’re building here have nothing to do with scales or stage presence. You’re learning to read between the lines, to keep yourself and your circle safe, and to trust your own signals when the rest of the world is telling you to perform.

#memoir #gifted #music #survivor #fieldnotes #safety #consent #hiddeninplainSight

Red Flags & Green Flags: Who Gets In, Who Stays Out

Learning to read people is as essential as any tech tool or boundary protocol. Not everyone deserves a place in your circle, and not every red flag means immediate danger—but the patterns always matter. Here’s what I watch for.

Red Flags (Hard Stops, Handle With Caution) • Ignores or pushes past boundaries, even small ones. • Gets defensive, sulky, or angry when told “no.” • Asks for personal info early: address, real name, financials. • Gossips or shares others’ stories without permission. • Publicly calls out disagreements instead of handling things privately. • Demands instant access, support, or loyalty. • Pressures you to join group calls, share locations, or show up in person. • Talks badly about people who set boundaries. • Has a new drama every week—always someone else’s fault. • Makes you feel guilty for needing space, privacy, or breaks.

Green Flags (The Keepers, The Steady Ones) • Respects your first “no” without complaint or pressure. • Checks in on how you want to communicate—never assumes. • Holds your story quietly; doesn’t share without consent. • Handles disagreements directly and privately. • Celebrates your boundaries and personal wins. • Follows through on promises, even small ones. • Shows up reliably, not just when it’s convenient for them. • Grows with feedback, admits mistakes, doesn’t hold grudges. • Feels safe to vent to—and respects if you need to pause. • Values trust as much as you do.

What I’ve Learned

No one is perfect, but green flags cluster and red flags stack up. If you start seeing a pattern of red, trust your gut. You’re allowed to walk away at any point, no matter how much history you have. The people worth keeping will never make you regret holding a boundary, and you’ll never have to explain why you needed one in the first place.

Trust isn’t just a feeling—it’s a pattern, a practice, and a choice you get to make every day.

#redflags #greenflags #boundaries #survivor #fieldguide #trust #safety #protocols #memoir

Survivor’s Guide: How to Set Boundaries & Vet People

It’s easy to talk about boundaries. It’s another thing to live them—especially when you’re coming from a world that taught you to override your own instincts just to keep the peace. Here’s my lived, field-tested protocol for setting boundaries and vetting who gets close.

Start With a “No” Default

Assume your time, energy, and story are precious until proven otherwise. If you’re not sure, say no or say nothing. It’s always easier to open a door later than to slam it shut after a breach.

Watch What People Do—Not Just What They Say

Anyone can talk a good game about respect. I watch for whether people back off when I draw a line, respect my silences, and don’t fish for personal details I haven’t offered. If someone reacts poorly to a no, that tells me everything.

Give Trust in Layers

I don’t drop my whole story, location, or network to anyone on day one. I start with surface topics, then watch how people handle them. If they pass the first test, I add a little more. If they leak, boundary-push, or get weird, I cut it off—no explanation needed.

Repair Privately, Not Publicly

When there’s conflict, I handle repair in private, not for the audience or group chat. If someone can’t do real repair, or needs everything on display, that’s a sign to pull back.

Use Tech to Back Up Boundaries • Separate accounts for different groups or risk levels. • Disappearing messages for sensitive topics. • Don’t let people pressure you for your real name, address, or contact info.

Vet Support Spaces, Too

Not every “survivor” or “safe” space is actually safe. I watch for: • Who runs the group, and what’s their reputation? • Are there clear rules about privacy and leaks? • Do people get called out for violating boundaries, or does drama get swept under the rug?

Don’t Apologize for Protecting Yourself

You never owe anyone more access than you want to give. If someone gets offended, that’s about their entitlement, not your safety.

Take Breaks & Audit Often

I regularly review who has what access and adjust as needed. I don’t explain every change, and I don’t let guilt keep me in unsafe rooms.

Remember: Your Network, Your Rules

There’s no single right way to set boundaries, but you get to decide who has access, and when. Anyone who respects that is worth keeping. Anyone who doesn’t—cut the cord.

#boundaries #survivor #fieldguide #consent #safety #vetting #support #protocols #railroad #memoir

Field Notes: Music Memory Code

Music is more than background—it’s survival tech, memory key, and signal. In my world, playlists do the work that words can’t. Every track, every sequence, is chosen as deliberately as any password or safety protocol.

Music as Memory & Signal

I grew up knowing that music was one of the few things that could bypass a locked door—emotional, cognitive, even literal. When words failed, or when trauma made it too risky to speak, I built playlists that doubled as memory maps. Certain songs tell my brain: “You’re safe now,” or, “It’s time to mask up.” A four-song set is more than a vibe—it’s a coded message to those who know.

Deprogramming & Emotional Reset

When cult logic or high-control trauma tried to overwrite my identity, music cut through. Singing—alone or with trusted friends—restored pieces of self that words couldn’t reach. These aren’t just coping mechanisms. They’re deprogramming tools, mapped to different recovery states. • Song sets = emotional pulse checks. • Specific artists = safety signals for different corridors. • Shared playlists = how I verify trusted network presence, both online and IRL.

Covert Signaling & Survivor Network

There’s an underground language in the Railroad: • Four songs in a set means “safe.” • Four songs from the same artist means “high safety.” • Two from two different artists = “moderate safety.” • Four from four = “low, but still safe.” These codes run deeper than most realize. If you see me post a certain playlist at a certain time, that’s as much for the network as it is for me. Music bridges what trauma splits. If you’re tuned to the frequency, you’ll always know how to find me.

Invitation to Others

You don’t need to use my exact codes—find your own. Music can be a shield, a lighthouse, a boundary, or an invitation. Every survivor deserves a playlist that brings them home.

#musicmemory #safety #recovery #fieldnotes #railroad #healing #deprogramming #survivor

Field Notes: Music Memory Code

Music is more than background—it’s survival tech, memory key, and signal. In my world, playlists do the work that words can’t. Every track, every sequence, is chosen as deliberately as any password or safety protocol.

Music as Memory & Signal

I grew up knowing that music was one of the few things that could bypass a locked door—emotional, cognitive, even literal. When words failed, or when trauma made it too risky to speak, I built playlists that doubled as memory maps. Certain songs tell my brain: “You’re safe now,” or, “It’s time to mask up.” A four-song set is more than a vibe—it’s a coded message to those who know.

Deprogramming & Emotional Reset

When cult logic or high-control trauma tried to overwrite my identity, music cut through. Singing—alone or with trusted friends—restored pieces of self that words couldn’t reach. These aren’t just coping mechanisms. They’re deprogramming tools, mapped to different recovery states. • Song sets = emotional pulse checks. • Specific artists = safety signals for different corridors. • Shared playlists = how I verify trusted network presence, both online and IRL.

Covert Signaling & Survivor Network

There’s an underground language in the Railroad: • Four songs in a set means “safe.” • Four songs from the same artist means “high safety.” • Two from two different artists = “moderate safety.” • Four from four = “low, but still safe.” These codes run deeper than most realize. If you see me post a certain playlist at a certain time, that’s as much for the network as it is for me. Music bridges what trauma splits. If you’re tuned to the frequency, you’ll always know how to find me.

Invitation to Others

You don’t need to use my exact codes—find your own. Music can be a shield, a lighthouse, a boundary, or an invitation. Every survivor deserves a playlist that brings them home.

#musicmemory #safety #recovery #fieldnotes #railroad #healing #deprogramming #survivor

Language & Labels: Naming as Survival

Names aren’t just a detail—they’re armor, signals, and sometimes the difference between safety and exposure. Every alias I use, every label I claim or reject, is both a layer of truth and a tool for surviving in a world that’s never been neutral ground.

Why Aliases Matter

Cult survivors, trauma survivors, and anyone who’s ever lived under threat learn fast: names have weight. The right name can open doors, shield your story, or let you speak a truth that would be too risky otherwise. The wrong name—or the right name in the wrong room—can put a target on your back.

That’s why my aliases aren’t accidental. “Megan” was born from a need to talk to Charles about real-life me, without ever saying “Rose” in a place someone might overhear or trace. There was no “Megan” in my life then. It was a cover we built together, clean and unclaimed. I started using it on servers where no one knew me as Rose, then adopted it in anti-cult spaces. Not everyone liked it, but it kept me safe.

Labels, Triggers, and Subculture Logic

Words like “cult” are landmines. I learned that calling something a cult can shut down a conversation, trigger panic, or even put a target on my family. That’s why I use “cult-y,” “cult-ish,” or just describe the behavior, not the label. Social subcultures thrive on spectrum logic—nothing is all or nothing, and sometimes it’s the gray area that keeps people talking.

I use civilian-friendly language in public, always with a few hints for those tuned to the frequency. Railroad operatives, survivors, people who know the coded pulse—they catch the signal. Everyone else just reads a careful, calm version of the truth.

Under Cover in Practice

Being under cover is never just about having an online pseudonym. It’s about living a split reality—knowing what stays the same (my humor, my core logic, my voice) and what flexes (name, backstory, how much I share). I give people plausible deniability: if someone asks about me, they’re free to say “I don’t really know her,” even if we’re close. That’s not a snub; that’s safety.

Why I Don’t Live With the Community

My commitment to never again live with anyone from the online blind community is part of this logic. I have too much data, too many stories that aren’t just mine. The integrity of my support web, and my own peace, depend on keeping that boundary ironclad. My partner is pre-blind community. If the home isn’t military safe, I’ll get a hotel—period.

Defining Who I Am, On My Terms

Language is power. Every alias is chosen, not given. Every label is tested for risk before it’s ever made public. I only drop my guard with those who prove, over time, they know how to hold it. If you’re reading this and don’t know what to call me, that’s by design. Respect is knowing when not to use a name at all.

The Power of Renaming

Renaming isn’t just hiding—it’s reclaiming. Every time I take a new alias, it’s a chance to choose how I want to be seen, to write a piece of my story that isn’t controlled by anyone else’s narrative. For a long time, other people named me: family, institutions, even abusers. Now, every name I use is a choice. It’s not just about dodging risk—it’s about building an identity strong enough to carry all the parts of my history, not just the ones that survived the last room.

Building Bridges, Not Just Walls

At the end of the day, all these aliases and labels aren’t just barriers. They’re bridges—ways to reach people who might never have listened to “Rose” or “Megan,” but who find themselves reflected in a story told by someone like them, under a name they trust. Sometimes, the safest thing I can do for myself and my network is to build a new identity, and then use it to open a door for someone who’s still out in the cold.

I want people to find a piece of themselves here—not because they cracked the code, but because the code kept the story alive long enough to matter.

Holding Space for Others

Every survivor I know has their own language, their own aliases, their own rituals for safety. I never ask anyone to share more than they want, and I don’t judge the names they pick. If you need to be “Bluebird” one day and “Kai” the next, you’re still welcome at this table. If you find the language here too coded, that’s all right—just know it’s meant to keep the most vulnerable among us from being picked off by those who don’t care about the cost.

What matters is the choice, the agency, and the right to tell your story—or not—on your terms. That’s why I’ll keep using aliases. That’s why this project will always have a hundred doors and a thousand passwords. It’s not about hiding from the world; it’s about making sure the right people can find their way in.

#aliases #language #labels #safety #survivor #fieldnotes #community #belonging #memoir

Consent Privilege & Group Dynamics

Consent privilege is the elephant in every digital room I’ve ever entered. It’s what lets some people overshare, perform, or process publicly without ever worrying about the cost. If you’ve never felt that calculation in your bones, you don’t know the stakes I’m playing with.

What Consent Privilege Looks Like

I’ve been in spaces—especially on Mastodon, Discord, and survivor servers—where people think nothing of asking for my financial backers in public, or pressing for stories that aren’t mine alone to tell. My family, my partners, and my support system have not consented to being dragged into anyone’s curiosity. That’s not just a privacy line—that’s a hard stop.

People with consent privilege don’t just expect answers, they expect access. They don’t realize what it’s like to weigh every word, every DM, every shared location, every group invite. For them, privacy is a nice-to-have. For me, it’s the line between safe and exposed.

The Emotional Math

Watching others flaunt their consent privilege can feel like salt in a wound. It’s not just envy—it’s a reminder that my world has higher walls, stricter rules, and far less room for error. When people don’t bother to learn my boundaries, I don’t spend my limited energy learning theirs. That’s not bitterness; it’s resource management. My emotional bandwidth is not a group project.

I vent when I need to, but I never broadcast repair. People can’t keep up with who I’m close to or who’s in my network, and that unsettles them. But my privacy isn’t up for debate. If someone can’t respect a no, they never get access to a yes.

Group Spaces vs. Real Life

In every group, the person who knows me least sets the baseline for what I share. Behavioral aliasing is a survival tactic. If there’s risk, I go shallow. If the group is truly safe, I’ll open up. But that’s rare. Group boundaries are a two-way street, and I only learn to respect others’ if they show they care about mine.

One-on-one is different. I’m more direct, more honest, more myself. But that’s always earned. If you want in, prove it—and understand that plausible deniability is built into my safety plan. I’ve given explicit consent for trusted people to act like they don’t know me, if it keeps everyone safer.

Protocols in Practice

Living under consent threat means operationalizing everything. I only stay in military safe homes now. If it’s not safe, I’ll get a hotel, no matter the cost. I don’t live with anyone from the online blind community—too much data, too much risk, too much history. Survivor and tech-only spaces are my default.

People have asked why I didn’t protect others as fiercely. The answer’s simple: when people made it clear that my boundaries didn’t matter, I had no incentive to memorize theirs. Most of my energy went to not burning out, not playing catch-up for those who never learned my lines.

What Freedom Really Means

Freedom isn’t about being able to share anything, anytime. It’s about choosing what, when, and with whom. Every “no” I give is a yes to myself and my network. If you live in a world where that’s not necessary, consider yourself lucky. For the rest of us, these protocols aren’t just preference—they’re how we stay alive.

#consent #privilege #boundaries #safety #groupdynamics #survivor #fieldguide #memoir

Boundaries & Consent

Boundaries aren’t just guidelines—they’re my lifeline. Every protocol, every alias, every story I choose to share or hold back starts with the same question: Does this protect my peace, or does it put me at risk?

Boundaries as Survival

For me, boundaries are more than rules—they’re guardrails that keep my life on the road. When I say no to sharing a detail, posting a location, or letting someone into my living space, it isn’t about ego. It’s about survival. If I don’t set my boundaries, someone else will, and it will always be for their comfort, not my safety.

I’ve had to learn that the hard way. When people don’t bother to learn my real boundaries, I don’t go out of my way to learn theirs. Most of my energy is spent protecting my own emotional bandwidth. If you want trust or access, you have to show up and do the work too.

Consent in Real Time

Consent isn’t just about big moments—it’s the tiny, everyday choices. I decide who gets what version of me. Who sees my stories. Who hears my real name. Who I let close. In group spaces, the person who knows me least sets the baseline. I use a behavioral alias in those rooms, keeping my truest self for those who’ve earned it.

One-on-one, the masks come down—if I trust you. Otherwise, I keep the conversation shallow. That’s not cold; it’s necessary.

I consented, early on, to people using plausible deniability to keep me safe. Sometimes, that means they act like they don’t know the full story, even if they do. That’s not betrayal—that’s protection. It lets everyone breathe easier when things get messy.

Emotional Bandwidth & The Reality of Repair

I vent in public sometimes, but I never talk about when we make up. People can’t keep up with who I’m in touch with, and that scares some. But the real work of repair, trust, and forgiveness always happens in private. If you want in, you have to prove you can hold what I give you.

I no longer live with anyone from the online blind community. Too much data, too many moving parts. The risk of accidental breaches or drama isn’t worth it. My partner is pre-community—that’s a safety net I’m not willing to give up.

Socially Safe vs. Military Safe

Disability community spaces taught me that “socially safe” homes are different from “military safe” homes. I only stay in military safe ones now. If I can’t get that, I’ll get a hotel. That’s for my data, my peace, and the integrity of everyone who trusts me. If the space isn’t enforced, I walk.

Consent Privilege & Group Dynamics

Some people never think twice about privacy. That’s consent privilege. They can share freely, take up space, be messy, and bounce back. I have to calculate every move. Sometimes, people flaunt that privilege. They want my data, my story, my sources—things my family and supporters never consented to share. I don’t negotiate on their safety.

If people cared more about group boundaries than my own, I noticed. I didn’t have the energy to memorize boundaries for those who never bothered to learn mine.

How My Support System Changed

My support system now is tight, intentional, and built on real, earned trust. No real names here, just people who show up when it counts. Survivor-only and tech-only spaces are where I spend my time. If you want access, show up, prove it, and respect the boundaries that come with my trust.

Freedom Through Boundaries

The best part? Boundaries don’t fence me in—they give me freedom. I choose what, when, and with whom. If you get it, you’re probably already doing your own version of this. If you don’t, you’ll just have to take my word for it: nothing in my life happens by accident. Every “no” is a “yes” to my own safety, and to the people I hold close.

#boundaries #consent #safety #survivor #railroad #memoir #support #privilege

Living Under Cover

Living under cover isn’t just an online strategy—it’s how I survive, day in and day out, both on and offline. Some things stay the same: my values, my humor, my survivor’s heart. But a lot shifts beneath the surface, and most people will never see it.

Online Safety: More Than Just a Username

I move through the internet in layers. Each space—Discord server, survivor group, advocacy chat, tech corridor—gets its own version of me. Sometimes it’s just a name. Sometimes it’s a whole new story, or an entire side of myself I only reveal in the right company. I never post my exact location in real time. I don’t share my home address except with people I trust, and even then, it’s on a need-to-know basis.

Tools matter. I use VPNs and, when I want extra security, Tor. If I’m handling money for survivor work, I’ll use crypto or a privacy-focused payment method instead of my regular bank. This isn’t about being shady. It’s about recognizing that, in my world, information is currency—and protecting it is survival.

Boundaries at Home: No More Blurred Lines

One rule I stick to: I don’t live with anyone from the online blind community. That’s not about holding a grudge or being cold. It’s because I know too much—I’ve seen and heard too many stories, and the risk of accidental breaches, misunderstandings, or misplaced trust is just too high. My partner is the exception—he’s pre-community, and that boundary keeps us both safer.

When I travel, I only stay in “military safe” homes. Socially safe is nice, but if privacy isn’t absolute and boundaries aren’t enforced, I’ll get a hotel. Protecting my data, my network, and my peace isn’t negotiable anymore.

Behavioral Aliasing: How I Read the Room

In groups, I always use a behavioral alias. That doesn’t just mean a name—it means a whole version of myself designed for the level of safety in the room. The least-informed person sets the tone. If someone’s new, or if I’m unsure about someone’s motives, I go surface. If it’s a room of in-person friends, I can be more open, but I never stop reading the energy.

One-on-one, especially with people I trust, I drop most of the guard. That’s where the real connection happens, and where I can tailor my story to the actual person in front of me—not the lowest common denominator in a group.

Venting, Repair, and Plausible Deniability

People sometimes notice that I vent in public, but rarely talk about repairing relationships afterward. What they miss is that most of the repair work happens in private. People can’t keep up with who I’m actually in touch with, and that unsettles them. But that’s not my job to manage—it’s a boundary that protects me.

Plausible deniability is a tool I use for my own safety and for the people around me. I’ve consented to letting others say “I don’t really know her,” even if they do. It’s a shield, not a betrayal. That ambiguity keeps everyone safer—especially in communities where being too visible can cost you.

Support Systems and Circles

My support system now is tight, intentional, and built on trust, not numbers. There’s my partner, a handful of old friends, and a few survivor allies who get it. I spend my time in survivor-only Discords or tech-only spaces, keeping circles tight and boundaries clear.

If the home isn’t military safe, I don’t stay. If the group isn’t consent-based, I don’t share. And if someone doesn’t take the time to learn my boundaries, I don’t stretch to learn theirs.

The Core That Stays

No matter what name I’m using or what story I’m telling, the heart of it is always the same: survival, integrity, and care for the people who trust me. My safety habits aren’t about paranoia—they’re about hard-earned wisdom. Living under cover isn’t just a habit. It’s the foundation that lets me live—and help others live—on my own terms.

#cover #safety #privacy #boundaries #railroad #memoir #support #survivor

Origins & Naming

I didn’t grow up using aliases. That came later, when survival and safety started to matter more than being understood. My world always had layers—family, music, survivor work, boundaries, and all the names I learned to answer to.

Childhood and Family

I was the kid with a violin case in one hand and a recorder in the other, never quite sure if I wanted to disappear or take up space. My mom would say, “Blend in when you have to, but make sure they hear you when it matters.” I sang in choirs, was captain of the violin team, and did my years of private voice lessons—four years straight in high school. Most of the time, I felt like the voice that stuck out, even when it shouldn’t. But only if you had a keen ear.

We moved around a lot. I learned early how to pack up, adjust, and scan a new room for who was safe and who wasn’t. My brothers all went military—Joe, Andrew, and Jon—which shaped more of my worldview than I admitted at the time. I watched them build walls around their feelings, speak in coded language, trust only their own, and it rubbed off. My family was my first “network”—but also the first place I learned not everyone is on your side.

When Cover Became Survival

The journalism came next, if you want to call it that. It was never about bylines or interviews for me. It was about watching, listening, and reporting back—first to my family, then to whatever survivor network trusted me at the time. My writing was top secret work. I started crafting messages and protocols for people who’d never be able to share their stories in the open.

I never planned to use aliases, but one night online, with Charles, it became obvious: talking about “Rose” was dangerous, and there was too much at stake. I proposed it: “We need a name for me—a cover, so if someone reads these chats, they just think you’re talking to a friend.” Megan stuck, mostly because it meant nothing to either of us. No baggage, no history. Just a clean shield.

The Logic and Layers of Aliasing

After that, Megan wasn’t just a nickname; she was a safe room. She became the version of me who could cross into anti-cult spaces, survivor forums, and new Discord servers without dragging my past into every introduction. I got in the habit of using the name nobody in the room knew, adjusting my stories and my tone to the person who knew me least. In some circles, Megan was soft and friendly. In others, she was the one who never let anything slip.

I learned to match my behavioral alias to the group. In mixed company or spaces with shifting rules, I kept it surface. If it was mostly people who’d met me offline, I let more of myself show. But I always read the room, tracked the risks, and made sure nobody got access to parts of me they hadn’t earned.

Music, Masking, and Survival

Music was my original alias, if I’m honest. There were years when the only way I could say what I really felt was in a practice room or a concert hall. When I sang, people listened. When I played violin, I had permission to stand out—but never too far. I wasn’t great at violin, but I was always good enough to lead. Singing, though, was the place where I could let my true voice through, even if most people only caught glimpses.

Sometimes, I chose singing over everything else. I let go of violin because journalism—meaning, the work—took up every extra hour. I didn’t have time for it, not as an adult. But I never stopped thinking of myself as someone who needed music to survive.

Boundaries, Consent, and Privilege

I watched others flaunt their consent privilege, moving through the world like their privacy was guaranteed, like boundaries were suggestions. That was never my reality. For me, consent was earned, not assumed. If people didn’t take time to learn my boundaries, I stopped trying to learn theirs. My energy was finite, and most of it went to protecting my emotional bandwidth.

I felt the gap—between those who could share freely, make mistakes, and bounce back, and people like me who had to weigh every word. Sometimes I wished I could move with that ease, but I knew better. The cost was too high.

What Endures

No matter the name, I’m still me. My sense of humor, my need for music, my core values—they’re not aliases. They’re the thread that runs through every story, every new room, every mask I wear.

If you see yourself in this—if you’ve ever drawn a line, changed a name, or walked away from a space that didn’t feel safe—then you’re already part of my network. Even if you’re just passing through, you’re welcome here.

#cover #alias #consent #safety #railroad #memoir #music