I talk to the same friend from yesterday pretty
regularly. Recently we were talking about me learning to drive again, with her
offering to help. One thing I have learned, which she confirmed, is that
horrible discomfort and fear I felt then is normal, where most people still
feel that way until a while after they have their license.
I know that now, but then I thought it was something
wrong with me, and I said it was always easy for me to think that I was worse
than everyone else. She said that was odd, because there are very few things I
do worse than other people.
I know what she meant. I am competent in a lot of
ways. Maybe I over-analyze, but I do figure things out that way. I still feel
like there are things wrong with me that are not wrong with everyone else.
It does go back to that time. Why was I the one they
picked on out of everyone else available? Was I the only one that would be a
total joke? That's what it felt like. I am not impressed by the theory that the
secretly wanted me, but it does seem feasible that the insecure base I was
built on drew them to me. The last time I was groped, I was having a really
insecure night; perhaps predators sense weakness.
If that insecurity that I carried into grade school
and junior high with me made me a more attractive target, it also made it take
a heavier toll. I don't think we should need extra reasons to be kind, or to
not go out of our way to be cruel, but okay, here is one: You don't know the
background against which your victim is hearing that "teasing".
What I heard was that I could never be loved, and it
was against the background of being fat. In one way it was like the playground attack before - I did not understand that accepting abuse for a place in the
circle was an option; I thought I was just out. It was different in that I was
able to open myself up to friendship again. Romantically, I couldn't.
I don't know if that's because I was older, or I
simply got lucky with friendship. It may just be that I handled the later event
wrong. I compartmentalized in a big way. I cut off the romantic part of myself,
and taking away the impossible part allowed me to function in other ways.
I'm not saying I did a great job of it. I would have
stormy weekends about twice a year where I would just hate my family for not
being there for me, or even really loving me. There were ways in which they
could have been more supportive, but this was not their problem. I was a lot
less open and trusting (which, incidentally, can make it hard for other people
to know that their support is needed or how it is needed).
And I still liked boys all the time. But they
couldn't like me back, so I couldn't like them that way. I became a very
helpful person, assisting with homework and volunteering to decorate for dances
and managing sports teams. It was gratifying, but I wasn't letting myself be a
full person. It would have been perfectly normal to like boys, if I could have
been a normal and acceptable girl. I was so sure I wasn't.
I am not completely sure now. Sometimes there were
things that happened that were kind of like flirting, but it had to be just
teasing, because no boy would ever see me that way. No boy actually asked me
out, anyway. Maybe the sturdy walls were a problem, but there seemed to be
plenty of corroboration that I was pathologically unattractive. So even when I
was in love, I didn't say it.
That seemed like the only viable option. When I did
let my guard down, thinking that I could love someone who could love me back,
and finding out that I was horribly, horribly wrong, the only thing I wanted
for six months was death. That I could have years ahead of that kind of
emptiness and loneliness felt unbearable.
Except that I eventually pulled out of that, and I
gained a greater perspective on what I had been doing wrong, and how I had let
people I didn't even like define me. It was a step in healing.
So maybe if at some point I had taken a chance, and
told Mike or O.B. "I love you", maybe they would have broken my
heart, but maybe I would have healed then, and moved on, and become a normal
relationship having person.
It seems equally possible that if I had entered a
relationship at some point I would have been overly clingy or defensive or hurt
him with sarcasm or done something else wrong, but then maybe I would have been
less wrong the next time. I don't know; I only have now.
But the one thing that is very clear now is that if
I want to be cherished - if when I am listening to myself and asking for what I
need and that's the word that comes to mind - then I need to let myself be open
to that.
No comments:
Post a Comment