Rebecca Black is no stranger to the pitfalls of meme-dom. Nearly nine years ago, her song "Friday" became the joke du jour for the internet as people around the world mocked the then-13-year-old.

It's the type of thing that would make anyone want to bury their head in the sand and never be seen again. Not Rebecca Black.

To the chagrin of her detractors, Black hit Twitter yesterday afternoon with a message of self-love while reflecting on her experience with the song. The post details her teenage years, which was fraught with rejection, depression and bullying.

"9 years ago today a music video for a song called "Friday" was uploaded to the internet," she tweeted. "Above all things, I just wish I could go back and talk to me 13-year-old self, who was terribly ashamed of herself and afraid of the world."

"To my 15-year-old self who felt like she had nobody to talk to about the depression she faced. To my 17-year-old-self who would get to school only to get food thrown at her and her friends. To my 19-year-old self who had almost every producer/songwriter tell me they'd never work with me."

Ultimately, Black ends the post on a positive note, one of determination, forgiveness and healing.

"I'm trying to remind myself more and more that every day is a new opportunity to shift your reality and lift your spirit," she writes. "You are not defined by any one choice or thing. time heals and nothing is finite. It's a process that's never too late to begin."

Over the last 24 hours, the post went viral, garnering more than 293,000 likes, 33,000 retweets and 3,300 comments. Fans and supporters, new and old, have shared messages of love for the singer, declaring this a fresh start for the once infamous meme celebrity.

The post has created a groundswell of support for Black and a chance for reflection for how people treat each other online. She was, after all, only 13 when the song came out.

Black, for her part, seemed overjoyed to not be the internet's punching bag for once.

"I am just so blown away and confused and grateful at the messages you guys have been sending to me in response to this. I could have never imagined support like this."


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Comments 7 total

PYRO

Sometimes it's the sharp kick to the teeth that helps you change. While the act of the world shitting on one girl's vain pop song can be seen as retroactively awful, the fact that she was able to move past it and improve herself as a result can be seen as a positive. Good for her.

Plus we got this out of it and I REFUSE to see it as a negative:

1

Nyarlathoth

Hard to believe that was 9 years ago, I remember watching it at school like it was yesterday. While the video and memes were funny, it was sad that a child got so much crap from the internet.

2

ImperatorZor

I'm just glad that people have let the spite die.

0

Kenetic Kups

Still don’t feel sorry for her
she got a music video off of daddy’s money and got famous from it

3

Adam

she's rebecca back

2

Mace121

7 years does make a difference… For her case: The better… Even though she does look like Uma Thurman from Pulp Fiction, but that's just me thinking about it.

0

AintGotTimeForTsunderes

"Even though she does look like Uma Thurman from Pulp Fiction"
You sounded like that was a bad thing lol

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