I'll try to keep this brief, but that'll probably not happen.
Born in Oromocto, New Brunswick (about half an hour drive from Fredericton). Moved to Sydney, Nova Scotia when I was 4. My dad was a bank manager there for a number of years before being transferred again to Prince Edward Island. We were in Sydney long enough for me to attend all of elementary school. For PEI, I was there for middle and High School.
To be honest, I wasted a lot of my life. I spent a lot of time indoors, playing video games or watching horror movies or pro-wrestling.When my family got the internet, my addictive personality wound up spending far too much time on it. Still do, honestly.
I started writing in the summer after Grade 2, writing little short stories about Gizmo (from Gremlins). My writing improved slowly over the years, going from Gizmo stories to short horror stories (wherein the names of my bullies in middle school were victims) to superheroes, where I continued to evolve from there to today. I've gone as far as to create my own superhero universe, which I'm still picking at here and there (probably spending too much time world-building and not enough writing). In the last few years, I've had five short stories published in magazines. I've recently completed my first, full-length novel, which I've sent in to a publisher and still waiting to hear back from them.
A lot of my life, I've been struggling with depression. I was officially diagnosed with situational depression when I was 17. At the time, I was barely doing any work in school, not hanging out with my friends and starting to think of ending my life. One time, the principal walked by a classroom and saw me brush a piece of paper off my desk. He called me into the office. I was told I was being expelled because I was a bad influence on the other students. I had to repeat grade 12. What bothers me most about is that, today, things like that would be handled much differently. Mental disabilities and such are handled with at least some modicum of empathy in schools. Back in '96, not so much.
A lot of my depression, I think, stems from being relentlessly bullied in middle school. I was the new kid, a shy geeky kid and an easy target because I never fought back. Not only did I have to put up with it endlessly in school, but on the bus ride home and even at home because a number of fellow students (a bunch of spoiled, middle-class preppy kids...because "middle-class" was basically considered "high-class" in PEI) lived in my neighbourhood. So I could barely even leave the house without being a target. There would be prank phone calls and sometimes even a kid or two that would look through my windows. My best friend at the time (or so I thought) only spent time with me so he could find out all sorts of embarrassing things about me to tell the "cool" kids. When I hit puberty around early grade 7, I had an uncontrollable boner...which didn't help that I wore sweat pants a lot because I hated jeans. I got the nickname "Woody" which still hurts even today (seriously, please don't call me that, even if you think it'd be funny). One of the things that still haunts me today was, while we were watching a video in grade 8, another student across from me kept whispering "You're a loser, Nick. You're always going to be a loser. You're a loser, you're a loser..." over and over. Every time I get depressed, it's his voice that I hear.
I've struggled with depression pretty much all my life. I struggled with it when I was accepted into St. Thomas University in Fredericton. I dropped out after finishing my first year to persue...of all things...wrestling school. I up and moved to Halifax, working shit jobs like dishwashing and at Subway, while waiting to hear when this damn school was going to start. My friends and I all quit when we realized the guy was full of shit.
This was at the end of 1999. Having nothing left in the way of goals and feeling like I had nothing going for me, I had a nervous breakdown. My parents came and got me and I moved back in with them in Fredericton. My girlfriend at the time (High School sweetheart that I'd been with for about 3 years) dumped me for a guy she met over the net. I tried committing suicide in February 2000 by straddling the bridge and thinking of jumping. I spent two weeks in the mental health ward. For a number of years after, I struggled to find myself. I met a girl, who I lived with for about two of our three years together.
While we were together, though, I returned to school, focusing now on an English degree. I met a lot of new, good friends. But depression got in the way again (shortly after me and Ter broke up and I moved out) and I dropped out. I struggled again for a few years, working at Blockbuster Video the whole time. But then I finally said "fuck it" and started taking better care of myself. I started eating better, hitting the gym three times a week and wound up losing 50 pounds.
Around the same time, my old friend Mitch from High School, convinced me to try wrestling school again. He was going to a great one up in Toronto. So, since I wasn't doing anything else but working at Blockbuster, I left the Maritimes for the first time and moved to Toronto with nothing by my cat, my comics and my computer. Wrestling school was...well, it's a long story. Reader's digest version, though: I discovered I have a fear of being lifted up. Which, in pro-wrestling, wouldn't help. So, I went back to what I knew...working at Blockbuster (in Toronto). Another breakdown and I moved back to Fredericton with my parents. BUT, before I left, I applied to York University (Toronto). I was accepted.
After trying to find work all summer in Fr'ton, I moved back to Toronto and managed to (eventually) finish my English degree. It took thirteen fucking years, from when I started it in '97 at St. Thomas. But I finally got it.
Now, I've moved to Preque Isle, Maine because I was accepted to its local university's Elementary Education certificate program. I'm still struggling with depression (and, in fact, going through a bout of it now that's lasted all weekend as of this writing). But I keep hoping maybe something will change that'll make me feel not like a total loser.
Added at: 10:09
Aaaaand, I just caught up on the rest of the thread, as far as the argument is concerned. Fuck, now I'm going to regret going on and on about my depression.