The Meme is Not Me
I am a middle-aged white woman named Karen.
I’m not even ironically a Karen, like a teenager wearing some sort of normcore olive green cardigan. I really am named Karen.
I am not blonde. I do not have a severe jaw-length bob haircut. I do not want to speak to your manager.
From the Know your Meme website.
I know none of that matters, for I am a Karen, which was a perfectly good name in the 1960’s when it was applied to my natal form, but is now a burden upon which I have been saddled.
Memes, jokes, and Reddit threads all define what it means to be a Karen and none of them adequately describe the real me. I just have to wear the veneer of the meme, but on the inside, I know the truth.
Please embrace me in these troubled times.
I remember when Becky carried this burden. Who didn’t disdain Becky with the Good Hair? Or barbeque Becky? I laughed and laughed for the Becky memes were funny (and a little sad), but now fate has turned like the worm that it is.
Ask not for who the meme tolls, it tolls for me. I swallow my Becky laughter and stoically take my unearned meme lashings.
I do not have kids, but if I did they would be vaccinated and would attend public schools. I believe the earth is as round as a shiny blue marble. I do not try to cure my ailments with oils, balms or salves unless medical science calls for that, then oil, balm, and salve me up.
I’ve always seen myself as the very anthesis of the memeified Karen.
And yet here we are.
Karen is not a person, she’s a state of mind that shall live on in internet form for many, many years.
When I was a kid, I always wished for a hurricane to be named after me. I wanted to hear every weather person on every news station say my name.
I wanted hurricane Karen to be a good strong storm.
Just a few months ago, the name Karen was applied to a developing hurricane.
And then this happened:
From Peter Matti on Twitter
Not only was the hurricane joy stolen from me, storm Karen couldn’t even gather together enough wind to become a hurricane. Downgraded to tropical depression, she just sat out there being petulant, demanding attention without putting in the work.
What a disappointment. I refuse to allow this to become my metaphor.
I am not meme Karen. Meme Karen is not me.
My name may never be associated with something like Good Guy Greg, but at least I am not Scumbag Steve/Stacy.
Today, I shall go out, order something and not demand to speak to anyone’s manager, because I am a good Karen and I will represent my name nobly for all the decent Karens of this world who will redeem our name, one positive encounter at a time.