Real Positive Thinking

Think and Grow Rich has been called the “Granddaddy of All Motivational Literature.” It was the first book to boldly ask, “What makes a winner?” The man who asked and listened for the answer, Napoleon Hill, is now counted in the top ranks of the world’s winners himself. The most famous of all teachers of success spent “a fortune and the better part of a lifetime of effort” to produce the “Law of Success” philosophy that forms the basis of his books and that is so powerfully summarized in this one.
Day 10 of the 28 Day Self-Growth Plan
Think and Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill

I like this one. I’ve always liked this one. There is something about understanding the power and importance of positive thinking that has always appealed to me. Probably because I think I am allergic to negativity. That shit gets on me and it messes me up. I just can’t live there.

Seriously, there have been folks that deserve to have negative shit about them in my brain. I just don’t do it well (or at least for very long). I LOVE laughing at petty memes and WISH I could be that person, but I can’t.

Alright, not all of that last paragraph is totally true, and that’s kind of how I feel about the entirety of Think and Grow Rich – any idea can be taken into absurdity, throwing the whole idea away because it doesn’t always work is also absurd, and sometimes mostly true is true enough. This isn’t math we are talking about here.

The truth is that I don’t have a lot of negative shit about other people in my head. And I am a little petty. And I don’t really wish I was edgy enough to be really petty. And while that is more true, unless we are being super literal, the way it was stated the first time is pretty true as well.

And that is the way I have begun to change my approach positive thinking. I am naturally an optimist…ugh…this may get long because I feel like that statement just needs more, I need a bit more, to flesh it out.

It is no secret I have an unhealthy relationship with fear. I have discussed it ad nauseum. I am proud that it is getting better. I am honest enough to admit that it is still a thing.

When I scorched the earth that was my life 4 years ago, let me try to explain what that looks like. You know how when a building gets demolished and one second everything is the place it belongs – Company A’s desks are on their floor, in their space, Company B has their file cabinets in their space, Company C’s computers are in their office, the coffee shop has its cups on its shelves. Then BOOM! Demolished. Now there is just shit everywhere and it is a mess. You can walk through the rubble and see pieces of a desk, a file cabinet, a computer, a coffee cup. But which piece belongs to which desk and is that the coffee shop’s cup or somebody that worked in Company B, and this hard drive somehow made it through so it’s a good hard drive but is it Company C’s hard drive? You just don’t know.

That’s how it feels to shift through the rubble when you blow up your life. The pieces all look like they belong to you because you have stored them for so long. But they don’t. Some of the pieces are from other people’s shit that they put on you, shit you picked up on the side of the road that you should have just left where it lay, baggage that looked like yours when you claimed it but actually had a whole wardrobe that was not your size. But it’s all a big heap of mess and it is so hard to tell. So, I had to start sifting through the rubble trying to figure out how to sort it into what was mine and what isn’t.

The positive thinking is all mine. I am certain that one of my core beliefs is life is too short to spend time on nasty. I am certain that I let go of grudges easily, find the good intentionally, and move past situations better than some because that is who I am as a person.

The optimism, on the other hand, is only partially mine. I do assume good. However, if I am not careful, I will irrationally assume good because I am afraid of what it means if it is or gets bad – think head in sand. That is not productive – that’s delusion.

So now I work on being a real optimist. Not a realist optimist. But a real to the philosophical definition of optimist:

a person who believes that this world is the best of all possible worlds or that good must ultimately prevail over evil. – Oxford Dictionary

There is piece here that is super important to me – the acknowledgment of evil. Bad things are just an “is” thing. They will happen. They have happened. Looking for and hoping for the good does not allow me the ability to ignore that bad or the possibility of bad simply because it makes me uncomfortable and afraid.

This is important for a whole lot of reasons. Specific to this topic is the idea of positive thinking. If we take Napoleon Hill literally (which he may have intended and some may do), there is nothing we can’t do if we believe it hard enough.

Once you believe in an idea, keep don’t give up when things inevitably get a little tough.

If you give up, how can you be sure that you didn’t miss out on something amazing?

Autosuggestion can help you program your brain to believe whatever you want to become true.

This may all be literally true. I don’t know. I don’t have the time or patience to test it. Maybe I actually could believe hard enough and develop a divaesque singing voice (before you encourage that, you need to hear me sing – it’s really bad). Maybe I could slam dunk a basketball. Maybe I could memorize the Oxford dictionary (that would be soooooo cool). But I don’t have it in me to test it because I am not willing to give up all the other things I would have to sacrifice to devote that time to it.

I know for as many “didn’t give up and break through was right around the corner” stories, there are equal numbers of “it never happened.” That’s because the “just when I was about to give up, I succeeded” stories are only cool because it worked out that way. The lost item is always the last place you look. That’s just how life works.

Positive thinking isn’t about being blindly (or fearfully) optimistic. It’s not about beating your head up against a nearly impossible goal at the expense of everything else. It’s not about taking fiction and repeating it like a mantra so that it becomes true.

It is about believing that the greater good, the strength, the worthiness is available to you if you know where to look.

Napoleon Hill said, “Every adversity, every failure, every heartbreak, carries with it the seed of an equal or greater benefit.” THAT is positive thinking. THAT is the money shot. THAT Is the one idea that, if you can repeat it often enough until you believe it, makes you, makes me, unstoppable.

In case you are wondering, I believe it most of the time, so I am still somewhat stoppable. I do not expect it to be that way for long so if you are looking to take your shot, you should probably hurry 😊

That’s my secret, Captain. I’m always angry

I am losing my journey.

Ok, so I am trying to get into writing the truest sentence I know first, then working through all the stuff later. So let me expound on that just a bit and see where we go.

I am still afraid. I am not going to talk about being afraid today because frankly, it is exhausting. I’m like the Incredible Hulk of fear.


That’s my secret, Captain. I’m always angry.


How tired did Bruce look when he said that, I mean, for real.

Ok, so today’s little offering may not be very elegant, and I am going to be okay with that. I am just going to tell it how it goes. While it may not suit my ego, it suits the purpose – the purpose to stop sacrificing the journey.

  • I type “I am the Incredible Hulk of fear”
  • I google “Incredible Hulk angry” in order to make sure I get the quote exactly right – I am not looking to piss off my fellow Marvel fans today.
  • The very first thing that pops up is a StackExchange forum discussing the meaning behind the quote. I find the teaser intriguing and click through.
  • It’s really good. In fact, it is so good, I am going to interrupt my original thought, sacrifice elegance, and substitute flow of thought.
  • Forum participant, Avner Shahar-Kashtan offers:

In the beginning of the Avengers movie, Black Widow finds Banner in India, treating sick children. This isn’t just a humanitarian endeavor for him; Banner purposefully surrounds himself with injustice – with poverty, with senseless death – so that he could be constantly angry at something.

Being constantly angry allows him to keep his anger under control – it’s not a sudden spike of anger that disrupts his concentration and lets the Hulk out, it’s a constant, background anger that lets him decide when to unleash the green beast.

From the script:

 NATASHA ~ You know, for a man who’s supposed to be avoiding stress, you picked a hell of a place to settle.

BANNER ~ Avoiding stress isn’t the secret.

This doesn’t say it explicitly, but implies to me that his choice of location and activity are part of his secret.

In a flash, this provokes a few other references

  • Rocky and Mr. T
  • Elizabeth Gilbert in Big Magic
  • Joyce Meyer’s “Do it Afraid”

Actually, that’s not entirely true. The first two were flashes, the last one happened while typing the other two. Just trying to keep the actual flow here since this is a bit different for me.

Anyway, I am still not real keen on talking about me being afraid today – it is still exhausting. But this general look that I have discovered on my way to saving the missed journey is interesting.

  • Bruce learned to manage his anger by confronting it, immersing himself in it.
  • Rocky nearly lost himself because he refused to acknowledge his fear.
  • Elizabeth Gilbert has created a boundaries for hers; it is not allowed to impact the journey.
  • The Joyce Meyer one I don’t really remember. I read that one a long time ago but I am pretty sure it went something like “everybody is afraid of something. God has you. Do it afraid.”

My strategy isn’t any of these. It is more Piglet in nature; let’s not get anywhere close to anything that is scary. Let’s just sit here on this nice patch of earth and just love each other.

That really isn’t working for me. It is obvious my fight, flight, freeze is all out of whack. Hence the exhaustion, hence the lost journey.

I have done a lot of really neat stuff this year that have been accompanied by neat thoughts, incredible conversations, and new ideas. I have written about none of them. Fear takes my words first. I intended to write much more often this, year. I was going to document the college journey, the business progress, the life at home – all of it. I am so grateful for this rich and amazing life I have. I was committed to preserving it better, honoring it more, passing it down with better record by way of this keyboard.

We know what they say about the road to hell…

  • I am nearly finished with my first semester of college – and it has been amazing
  • I am on day 28 of a quarantine that has had me nearly 98% housebound and isolated. My day to day life, like so many others, is nothing like anything I have experienced before
  • My husband is a licensed pilot and an adventurer
  • Our oldest daughter and her boyfriend have bought their first home, our youngest has been accepted into the STEM program
  • I am running a pretty successful business
  • I have reengaged with my fitter self
  • I am reading A LOT

I have had time. I have had things to write about. I have memories that I have lost already. They go so fast. Oh sure, I can go back through, peek at my calendar, get a pretty good feel for what was going on and give you a record. But I am too far removed to give you an account. I am too much changed to give the in the moment words. Think I am exaggerating? Think about how much time it takes you to reconsider a knee jerk. Myself, it takes me very little time – my go to is to consider nearly everything a knee jerk and thus analyze it immediately. And I go back to it, boy do I ever go back to it, just to make sure I haven’t created some unfixable chasm in the universe. Therefore, a few days, weeks later, when I go back to recall the moment, I can pretend like all the updates aren’t there – but they are.

So I am losing my journey. More correctly, I am allowing fear to corrupt my journey. I am worried what other things I might be losing to fear…

Uncaging Courage

What’s got your courage caged? I have been walking around in a fog for days trying to figure out how I am going to walk into the new year with no real answer or where to start or where I want to go.

Couple of things (not literally because I am not sure how many things I have). First, this time of the year is always amazing for me. My brain is perpetually opening loops. Therefore, I have to be consistent about closing them or they will drive me absolutely crazy. They hook into each other and mesh where they have no commonality. They will bleed into each other creating their own new brand of loop that seems real but it completely fictitious. They will connect together to form themselves into big giant distractions of paralyzing mazes of “what if”s. Therefore, I have made it a habit each year to take the six days between Christmas and New Year’s to wrap up the old year and make welcome the new. Kinda like a cache clean out or a car detail. Not so much a focus on resolutions or declarations, just a little wash down.

Second, I haven’t been able to write lately. I know I have all these ideas about writer’s block and making time and schedules and priorities. But I just didn’t have it in me. Not being able to write, not having the words – or rather, not letting the words have me – create for a tough time of untangling thoughts.

Third, well, life is pretty great. I am a blessed woman. I am safer, more loved, better couched, more stable, than I have ever been. So when my brain goes into the all the “should” – I should be better to myself, I should exercise more, I should be more productive, I should have more accomplished, I should focus, I should be a better (insert whatever role happens to be forefront at the moment) – I begin to feel guilty for being unappreciative of all my haves. It takes a minute to get to the point where I remember that life is not a vacuum. Many things can be true at the same time – even when they seem to be at odds with each other. I could be more intentional about my gratitude practice – that does not mean I am ungrateful. There are improvements I can make. In fact, it is my belief that there are always improvements that can be made – that does not mean my place in life isn’t magnificent.

So now here I am, the second to the last day of the year, and I have spent more time than is typical trying to find the first word, the first idea, that will act as the catalyst and detangler for all the other ideas. That momentum that closes and sorts loops into something I can use when I sit down with my Happy Planner without feeling completely overwhelmed and deflated.

To that end, I have found a few things. The first was from my journal, the second from my husband, the third from a woman I don’t know. They have come together to give me just a hint of where I need to start. I am currently 539 words in attempting to avoid writing the truest sentence I know. The sentence that is clogging up everything else…

I am still afraid.

There it is. That’s not so bad. Actually, it sucks pretty good. I hate everything about it except that it’s finally released from my fingers. It has been haunting around my head for a few months now waiting to be acknowledged as the next thing that I really need to deal with. I said it once to my husband. Well, I didn’t really say it. I wasn’t very direct so it didn’t really do what it needed to do. I called up my therapist who I have not seen in over a year and asked if I could come by, but I didn’t say it at all then. I have heard it echo loudly in my brain more than once, but never gave it the space it needed.

But, I am still afraid. I am more secure and more loved and happier than I have ever been. My bent towards fear should be straightening out. Interesting thing I am learning – fear follows the same rules as all other energy. You can’t just dispel it – it has to be transformed into something else. The dispel part was great. I regained my life, my heart, my peace of mind. It is good. However, I have so much more to lose now, if I were to fall, the drop is steeper, the stakes higher. There is no longer that fear, but there is this fear.

I have found that I have gone back to editing myself to protect against the scary things. Not in the whitewash, fake way I used to (win!) but in a subtler way that leaves me feeling a bit muted. It is frustrating to be in this place but I am finding encouragement in the real things. Most importantly, this edit, while not ideal, is more palatable as it is a condition I place upon myself versus the feeling of being put upon. While there is fear and cautious movement, it is of my own doing and therefore in my control. Realizing you are in control of nothing but yourself is a powerful position if you understand what you are working with. It is also scary because there is no scapegoat – it is all you.

Now that I have that out of the way, I have some decisions to make…some truths to figure out.

“What’s got your courage caged?”

That one is easy – fear. Fear has my courage caged.

I want it to keep being easy. The next obvious question is, “Fear of what?” This is a question I ask myself regularly. However, it is usually in response to a particular situation, feeling, instance. Tackling it as a 360 degree life view is something else entirely. It’s deeper, rooted in soil I haven’t turned in a long time, shaded by uncertainty, and covered in years of push down.

What I do know today is that I do not know the answer. If I had to guess, there’s probably some fear of loss, abandonment, attachment, and just a general fear of being unworthy of love or goodness. Unfortunately, even if that turns out to be right, I have learned I can’t dispel it by simply naming it. I have to understand it, I have to overcome it and convert the negative energy into a usable one.

The Motives of People

While it may not seem like I have made any real headway in this journey today, I can assure you it doesn’t feel that way. The questions that may come up may not always be fun, but they are necessary to keep out the crazies. And that negative kind of way? I’m just going to keep leaning into the support that I couldn’t be more thankful to have. Hello 2020…let’s see about uncaging some courage…

I am a Terrible Person

Saying what’s true, or rather working through what feels true to get to what is actually true, fucks me up sometimes. It actually fucks me up a lot of the time. I am working on getting comfortable with what is rather than my judgement (or the judgement of others) of what should be. Those thoughts, those feelings, rather than the actual thing itself will tug my heart, strain it to the point that my feels and my tear ducts try to take their turn.

I sat on the porch with myself for quite some time. He looked at me and said, “What’s wrong?”

I love that about him, by the way. Even when he is pretty sure he knows what my problem is (and he is almost always right), he never assumes. He doesn’t try to make me simple in his head so he can manage me. He doesn’t skip the part of the conversation where I have to own what I feel at least enough to say it out loud to him. He doesn’t save me from my fear that I will say something he will find distasteful. He doesn’t try to live for me in an attempt to make me comfortable for him. He insists that I do these things for myself. You wouldn’t think there was so much packed into asking a question you probably already know the answer to, but there is.

We talked for awhile about ancillary woes. He let me move through my process of getting to the thing. Finally, I didn’t look at him (of course, I’d like to tell you I looked square in his handsome face and declared my truth – that isn’t how it happened). “I think I might be a terrible person or at the very least, not a very good one. I don’t think I feel the way a normal person feels.”

And that’s it really. If you take 100 things I get twisted up in my brain about, I would bet at least 50% of them (modest guestimation as I don’t want to exaggerate and I certainly am not going to launch an inventory) pare down to “I think I might be a terrible person or, at the very least, not a very good one. I don’t think I feel the way a normal person feels.”

Here’s the funny thing – and seriously, I don’t care how this sounds – out of all the feels I catch, that one is probably the most ridiculous. Allow me to set down my loosely held humility card for a minute and be clear. If there is anything I know about myself unequivocally, it is that I am a good person.

Now, that isn’t to say I don’t have a good row with my share of selfishness, pettiness, judgement, and many other baser emotions. I absolutely do. I am human after all, and a flawed one at that. Catch me in a bad moment, push the wrong buttons, pull the wrong strings and I have been known to behave less than my raising. But, at my core, I am a good person. The idea that I could be labeled as otherwise is Ludacris (and my autocorrect totally just made that the rapper and not the word and for reasons that I just can’t pinpoint, I am not compelled to change it.)

All that being true, once again on my back porch, I battled with the idea that I was, in fact, a terrible person. And, because one of my greatest goals in life is to be great for him, I knew I had to get to the point where I said it out loud. Because here is another feel almost as ludicrous as the other; I am actually afraid he will agree with me. I am afraid I will say that I am feeling some less than emotion and he will either realize some inner truth about me and be disgusted, or seize the opportunity to finally tell me how he really feels. Either way, I am ruined.

Roll your eyes, I don’t give a shit. I would rather you roll your eyes at my absolute and acknowledged crazy than to go one more day pretending I have something together that I do not. I spent a lot of years that way. It turns that’s a real good way to turn fake crazy into real crazy. Yeah, I’m out.

Anyway, I looked him dead in the other direction and said “I think I might be a terrible person or at the very least, not a very good one. I don’t think I feel the way a normal person feels.”

I could feel him looking at me. I could feel him looking at me in such a way that said, “I am not going to stop looking at you until you look at this expression on my face.” This is a nonverbal conversation that happens between us regularly. But I wouldn’t turn. I was immensely engrossed in the leaf on the tree that was holding on to its branch as desperately as I was holding on to my courage. I hear him say, “look at me.” While you can ignore what might be a nonverbal feeling, an actual request requires acknowledgment. My head turn is met with a solid “bitchpleaseareyouseriousyougottobekiddingme” face.

Funny thing about that. I believe he is being completely honest with me. His complete and utter dismissal of my lack as a person takes every bit of fear I have in sharing this revelation and transforms it into a fierce defense of the feeling regardless of its validity. Yeah, he’s a saint.

“I am serious,” I insist. “A normal person wouldn’t feel this way. A normal person would not be okay. A normal person would feel something different. I think I am broken. I think there is something wrong with me.”

I was grateful when I saw his face change from the “maybe I can make her laugh at the ridiculousness” to the “okay, so we are doing this” look.

“I think that you are just stronger than most. You are able to do things that other people just aren’t built for. You are going to handle what needs to be handled. You always do. That doesn’t make you a terrible person. That makes you the best person I know.”

Okay, some intellectual honesty here. The quotes are used to designate mostly what he said. It’s edited to eliminate some name dropping, situation specifics, and other stuff that is important to us but not for public consumption and would just distract from the main point.

The main point is, by the way, I do forget who I am sometimes. Either due to the opinions of others or because of the Many in my own head. I don’t think I’m far off in my thinking that most of us do.  Having a partner who is gifted in reminding you who are when you forget is a gift. Being able to hear it is a product of the work. Both together, well, that’s just worthy of next level gratitude.

Choosing the Feels

A few days ago (or maybe more at this point – the days are kinds running together due to the pace at which my life is currently moving) a girlfriend asked me how my book was going. My answer to her was “which one?” She seemed a little shocked at my confusion and said, “well, your novel, of course.”

The truth is my writing is more important to me than I think it has ever been. Mostly because it is less stifled, more accepted by those I care about, and something I am starting to feel less self-conscious about.

But I am still feeling self-conscious. It’s a feeling I am working on. Mostly because I know it is real. Mostly because I know it is ridiculous. Yes, that was two “mostly”s. Yes, I know how math works. No, this isn’t a math problem.

One of the hardest parts of putting nouns and verbs together on the page these days is the feeling of unworthiness. I think I may have mentioned this publicly before and I am currently resisting the urge to stop typing and go search to see. I won’t because the intention of that act is unproductive. If I were going to do it as a point of reference to further the work, that would be one thing. It isn’t that. It is simply a stall tactic. A visit into the past so that I do not have to stay present here, in the now, in the midst of this current work.

And I digress. I digress because I don’t want to address the idea of feeling unworthy. I attempt to skirt it for a few reasons, I think. But the most overwhelming one is, in the words of the wonderfully blunt Simon Cowell, it feels indulgent.

It has the air of wallow and the assumption self-deprecating behavior that begs for those who encounter it to shower me with platitudes of my wonderfulness. It feels like it could be misconstrued as the worst type of fishing expedition.

I have analyzed that idea for longer than maybe I should have. But that’s just my way. There’s probably a whole conversation I could have about that (and perhaps will), however for now, I will just leave it right there and you will just have to trust that I know myself pretty well and gave it more than a shallow thought. And after much contemplation, it isn’t indulgent or panderous (which isn’t technically a word but should be).

What it is, is honest. It is the way I feel. It is the accumulation of a lot of years of self-doubt and manipulation. It had it’s culminating moment when I heard someone say to me, “I don’t know why you write the way you do. You look silly. You write like you are somebody and you are just not. I don’t mean to hurt your feelings. It’s just that I love you and I don’t want you to make a fool of yourself.” That kind of shit, as fucked up and asinine as it is, will stick to a person. It stuck to me. It rooted and cross pollinated and had little demon spawn like a weed infestation all in my brain.

More than once I have crossed paths with folks who look at me like I am crazy. They have disapproved, publicly and privately, about my life choices. For a while I considered giving those opinions some weight – or at least time for consideration. Fairly quickly, I decided that wasn’t how I was moving into the second half of my life.

Keeping with weed analogy, I’ll explain it this way. When I was a kid, my dad would burn our yard every few years in the colder months, right before spring was scheduled to do what she does. It was supposed to get the junk out so the grass could grow back fuller. I later learned that this happens in forests and tree farms on occasion when the undergrowth starts to take over. The unproductive gets burnt away so that the good, the intentional, the real, can flourish.

I participated in a bit of “scorch the earth.” It probably wasn’t my finest hour, but I own it. And, even in hindsight, even when I see all the ways I could have done it different, even when I know I could have been better, I still don’t regret it. It was one of the few times, up to that point in my life, I lived in the present. Because I hadn’t done very much of that, I wasn’t very good at it. I am getting much better.

The scorch took care of a wide range of ills. However, as anyone knows, the process looks ugly, and it takes a while for the new and better to grow back. During that time, you have to be watchful for the weeds that survive, the hearty ones with deeper roots, darker places to hide. They will grow back. They are familiar and comfortable and will take back over if you let them. They will have the help of shit fertilizer more commonly known as the judgement and opinions of others who only see your mess. The crazy thing is, part of you will want to let them grow. You will look at the shit and put stock in the idea that maybe the others are right. There is the comfort of the things you know – good for you or not, and the exhaustion from doing the work otherwise.

I lived that part too. I weeded and I weeded and I weeded my new growth. It was hard and uncomfortable and draining. But the work was good. The tiredness, the soreness, was much like that physical feeling of a job well done. I am also fortunate enough to have a broad-shouldered husband who carries what I cannot. A family who gives me life. Friends who give me respite. I have moments when I feel weathered and acutely sense unfairness. It is in these times I look around and see how amazingly blessed I am. Those blessings are my strength.

I sit here tonight, over a week after I first started putting these thoughts to ink, and I can’t really remember all the places I intended to go when I first started. My husband and I exchange more words with each other during a day than I think most people do with every single person they come into contact with. There have been two recent conversations that give my initial sit down with myself a completely different perspective.

The first addresses ridiculous feelings and that I have come to terms with the fact that I have them. One of the greatest gifts of being overly self-aware is that I understand that just because I feel something doesn’t mean that I am, or anything else is, that something. It simply means I have a feel. My feelings are not a representation of fact – they are a suggestion of opinion and an indicator of external factors. Therefore, just because I feel unworthy doesn’t mean that I am unworthy. It simply means that there is a feel, a fear, that I need to root out and dispatch properly. It probably means I am giving the opinions of others more weight than they merit.

The other was a little more ego boost with a touch of tough love. Truth is, we have had this conversation before…more than once. Sometimes it takes more than we would like to make sure the message takes hold. Honestly, I am mostly okay with that. I am 42 years old. I spent a long time dealing in unhealthy habits attempting to function in disfunction and presenting to the world an “everything is wonderful” face. If that takes me a bit to work all that out, so be it.

My husband adores me. He makes it a point to make sure that I know that there is nothing I could do to change that. He makes it a point to be clear that he loves me just the way I am. In fact, in the very beginning of our reconnection, when I knew that he loved me, when I knew he wanted to be with me, when we knew how many challenges that created, he offered to let me go. He made the offer with the assurance that he would love me anyway, as he had always loved me. He had loved me a long time without having any hope that I would love him back. He didn’t see how that would change. He didn’t ask me to do or be anything for him. He asked me to be and do for me. That’s how he loves me. And if that meant him, great. And if it didn’t, well, he was okay with that too.

He reminded me again the other day his love was unconditional. I could function inside myself without fear. That if we agreed or didn’t wouldn’t change the fact that I was his girl and he had me. I could step into whatever it was I stepping into and know, with certainty, that he was there. And, because that is true, if I choose to keep holding myself back, freaking myself out, getting twisted in my own head, well, that was on me. I can’t blame that one anyone else.

In the words of Mike Trepagnier, “Choices. We all have them. I can only control mine.”

“April is Weak”

This. This was the unfinished journal musings from November that made yesterday’s go at Freeman a tangled mess. Now that this is addressed, I can get back to the other…

November 25, 2018
The idea had actually lingered for days. Better put, it seeded more than a year ago. A recent conversation, one that incidentally shouldn’t have mattered to me at all, sparked a need to flesh the idea out, to put real thought and understanding into the wisp in my brain. To understand it better because it was a route to understanding myself better.

I have long been aware that the way in which people know, or think they know, me is varied. I think all people, whether they acknowledge it or not, can claim this statement true for themselves. As individuals, we consider ourselves for ourselves. When we consider others, or are considered by others, additional histories, perceptions, and ideas come into play. More importantly, we rarely offer the same pieces of ourselves to others uniformly. What I share with my closest is different from what I share with my casuals, with my family is different depending on how we are family, with professionals is different than personals. And what I am and share with my beloved is wholly different and in a league all its own.

The Motives of People

That awareness is paramount in my work to release myself from the effect that the opinions of others have on me. In the not so distant past, those effects were pretty embarrassing. More than once I have berated myself for being a grown woman and still not having better control over my own emotions. I am all too aware of the debilitating effects the thoughts of others can have on me. I have made it no secret that Mike’s support and simple council – the motives of people who seek to make you feel a negative kind of way are always suspect and should be disregarded as unimportant – has been instrumental.

But I still get caught. I suppose I will always have moments when I get caught. As such, I have revised my intention for the work. To think that I will never be moved by the thoughts, feelings, or opinions of others is unrealistic. It’s not that I can’t do it; I won’t do it. It’s not who I am as a person. I am not that hard. I don’t have those kinds of edges. Moreover, I don’t want to be that hard or sharpen those edges.

I feel compelled to note that I do not see those traits as negative. Mike has them and I love it about him. He is my rock and his shoulders carry a lot of weight. I am able to be more fully who I am because he is my safe place. In return, I provide a safe place for him to rest. He has found the balance that allows him to be all the things that he is. That balance has become the new focus of my intention.

Overthinker Truth

I was described as weak. I am certain it is not the first time. I have long held suspicions that this was an idea held by others who make assumptions about a life they know very little about. I’ve never thought too much (relatively speaking) about it. I understand how the opinion could be contrived. To be completely truthful, I take a small amount of pride in knowing the secrets and nuances that make it untrue; a knowing others wanted to have but never obtained. Maybe it was larger than a small amount…

Maybe it was that pride that gave me comfort and counterbalanced the feelings of anxiety that come when you put too much stock in another person’s opinions. Before actual words were conveyed, there was also a vagueness to the assumption. I wasn’t entirely certain it was being said and, therefore, couldn’t be certain of the other opinions that extrapolated from there. It was easy to make up the asinine things being said about me and then neutralize their effect with laughter.  After that, the work was pretty much over in this regard. I was able to move past my tendency to lose myself in what I assumed the opinions of others were and I was satisfied.

An unfortunate fact of life is that fake monsters are much easier to defeat than real ones. While getting past made up shit in my own head was great practice, facing the real thing took a bit more work. Instead of assumptions and guesses, it was concrete and tangible. That I was thought weak was definitive and clear. The causes and effects were included. The whole of it was in writing, the gift of which is to be able to revisit and reread as many times as your crazy brain desires. 

Call it out from the push back

I am a little embarrassed to tell you how much this instance affected me. But, my experience has shown that if I speak it, name it, call it out from the push back and into the upfront where we can all see it, the work to dismantle it and make it appropriate is much, much easier.

I was angry. Angry at all of it. Interestingly enough, being called weak was at the bottom of the list of things about the situation that pissed me off. I realized I didn’t even care that this particular person held this opinion. I have learned that we are notoriously famous as people for transferring the things we despise about ourselves onto others. Like if we can identify it in someone else (correctly or not is unimportant) then it must not be true about ourselves. It is for this reason you will almost never hear me refer to others as loud, sensitive, or selfish. These are foremost thoughts I have about myself so I know that I am likely to misattribute them to others. Therefore, I was not surprised in this instance that “weak” was the adjective used to describe me. It is probably one of the foremost things they are afraid is true about themselves. They won’t admit it, they aren’t there yet. I get it.

Here’s where practice with the fake monsters shows its usefulness come game time. The opinion of others – the focus of the fake monster work – is found in the primary “April is weak.” I have fought the illusion of this monster before. I found the actual to be pretty much what I thought: an opinion offered by an irrelevant person whose motive is not in my best interest, born out of their own unaddressed inadequacies as an attempt to shift focus from the consequences of their personal choices by creating a version of reality that allows them to blame someone – anyone – else.

Understanding this made getting past the whole “April is weak” pretty quick and short work.

But the nag in my brain was obviously still there. It became increasingly frustrating and emotionally exhausting as I went back to the old hurt, over and over again, thinking maybe I hadn’t let it all go. But each time I went back, there was nothing there. It occurred to me that I was not finding anything because I was continually going back to a place I already looked – the primary.

The fuckery was in the ancillary. It almost always is. That’s why it is so often hard to get to, tough to identify, complicated to remove from the mess. So I put the entirety of the conversation back together again, the whole of the situation, the perspectives of all the parties. Then I felt around in the weeds, looked for the soft spots. Once again, the primary wasn’t it. But the bruise was all around it.

“April is weak” was couched in a history that wasn’t mine, tactics that weren’t his, and a truth that isn’t ours. And that’s where my anger lived. While I was encouraged that I found it, I was confused at the same time. This was more of the same, it should follow the same path as the original work. It didn’t. The only option was to put it through new work.

Am I afraid

“Am I afraid?” This, in so much that I can control my process, is always my first question. While I hold love as a higher emotional priority, and the question is essentially the same if I phrase it, “Am I feeling love or fear,” I have found that I am capable of being more honest with myself if I directly ask the question, “April, are you scared?”

I am not afraid. The anger comes from a place of protection, not defense. That is my truth. I fought pretty hard to be comfortable speaking it and getting real with myself and those around me. To have others take second and third hand information and have the audacity to attempt to have any confidence that they can begin to know a sliver about me is insulting. I am angry that my story was hijacked, sensationalized, and wielded by mouths who hold no honor for it.  

I immediately went for the easy route, the path that laughs at the audacity of others to put names in their mouth that they have no frame of reference for. That shit really is funny – most of the time. I could not find it funny today. I considered maybe I was taking myself too seriously. I decided that just this once, I was not. I was angry and I felt justified in my anger. Today, that emotion was not going to acquiesce to the more civilized, “Fuck ‘em, they’re stupid.”

There are moments when I will concede that my emotions get the better of me and they are unreasonable. However, that does not mean they are always unreasonable. There are times, such as this, where my ire is created by an encroached boundary.

And now that I have had better than a week to process and work through, I have come to a place where I realize the goal of my anger is to ensure that I have clearly stated my boundaries, not really to you, but most assuredly myself.

Protecting My Truth

My truth is an ever evolving, dynamic discovery that was breathed into being before me, molded in my yesterday, experienced in my today, and unfolding in my tomorrow. It has been hidden, muted, condemned, manipulated, misunderstood, edited, abused, ridiculed, and despised. I did those things. My truth is my responsibility and I take ownership of every unfortunate thing that has ever happened to it. I have apologized to and forgiven myself for living a life that was less than in exchange for what I thought was less strife and conflict. I have also promised to work every day towards becoming a person that protects my truth from such slights.

In that work I know a few things. One, not every argument, accusation, threat, slight, opinion, deserves a response. Depending on the narrative or the narrator, it is often beneath me to address it directly – especially when I haven’t been addressed directly. It’s hard to take opinions about you seriously when those holding them are incapable of adult conversation.

Elicit a Response

Two, because it is mine, I have the option of responding whenever I chose. I need no reason, good or otherwise, to engage when called out. It is ignorance to assume you can continually exhibit behavior for the express purpose of eliciting a response and then clutch pearls over the response you receive. There’s an old saying, Moses maybe, “Don’t start no shit, it won’t be no shit.” Actually, that was Lil Jon, but I am sure Moses thought it too.

Lastly, I am not ashamed to be a complex person. I am love and forgiveness. I am also cut you off and kiss my ass. I am enlightenment and growth. I am also a little trailer with a healthy helping of petty. A little bless your heart, a little fuck you. No, those aren’t the same thing.

Really last, you are welcome to think me weak. Better have thought worse. Smarter have been wrong.