Betrayal

I couldn’t breathe. I couldn’t get the words out. I was sweating. A cold sweat. My mind was a blur.

I was 13 years old when I had my first panic attack. I was in 8th grade history. We were going around the room reading passages from the textbook. When it was my turn, I was caught off guard. I was a good student. I hated getting in trouble. I hated doing anything wrong. It was my turn, but I lost track of where we were because I was talking to the person next to me.

My reaction was panic. A panic that I could not escape and could not hide from. A panic that exposed me. Everyone was staring. No one knew what to say, including the teacher.

Somehow, I made it through the rest of that class. I don’t remember if we went on break after that or if the next person started reading. I remember the stares and I remember hoping a friend could convince me it wasn’t that bad or that noticeable, but the damage was done.

Once you know your body can react that way, you don’t forget it, especially when you felt like it came out of nowhere. In hindsight, it is now obvious I was a ticking time bomb, but at the time, it didn’t make sense to me. I couldn’t find a clear reason for why one moment I could read aloud in front of my peers without fear and then the next I couldn’t.

There was plenty about my life that did not feel normal with my mom being sick, but at school, I could try to fit in and, for the most part, I did. The bullying the year before by those oh so great friends of mine seemed like a fluke. “I’m sure they were just kidding around.” “It was all in good fun.” Things you tell yourself to avoid seeing the truth.

Luckily, academically, I thrived. It felt good to be a pretty smart kid. It felt good to get praise from teachers. Even if I wasn’t super popular, at least I could feel like one of those kids with promise.

The moment the panic started in that 8th grade history class, any ounce of normalcy I was hanging on to drifted away. School was no longer safe. Nor was my voice. Nor was standing out academically if it meant using my voice.

Mentally, I deteriorated. The next four years were hell.

In my head, the struggle was loud. So loud. There was no time for rest when your mind was racing, when your thoughts were jumping around a mile a minute.

On the outside, it was quiet. So quiet. And lonely, so fucking lonely.

At this point, I think it is important to share some words of caution. Never underestimate someone’s ability to pretend. I was a master at pretending to “be okay” or at least okay enough to not cause anyone to seriously worry. At times I was even perceived as strong. At that time, it was the most important thing for me to fit in. To not stand out. Well, to not stand out in a way that would draw negative attention. The kind where an entire room is staring and laughing at me.

But on the inside, I was screaming. How could you not hear it?

On the inside, I needed you. Your comfort. Your reassurance. Why weren’t you there in all the ways I needed you to be there?

For the rest of high school, I spent most of my classes barely learning. I was too busy trying to predict what would happen in class. At first, I mostly feared the classes where reading aloud was likely to happen. Either freshman or sophomore year I mustered up the courage to talk to a teacher about my mounting fear of speaking and he worked with me to try it in doses.

I attempted a presentation. I think we were supposed to read a poem. It happened again. Noise came out, but it wasn’t words. It almost sounded like laughter.

And then I stopped trying to face the fear. I could only run from it.

My teacher didn’t push it more. Instead, I was skipped over without an explanation. In future classes, I would talk to those teachers when necessary. I was still a pretty good student. There were workarounds. Presentations where only the teacher was in the audience.

I will never forget when a guy I had a crush on asked if I had already presented in front of the class. I lied. I said yes. I told him he was asleep. I’m not sure he believed me, but the girl who heard this conversation did not. She wasn’t one to fall asleep in class.

I felt like a fool. I hated this life. I felt better knowing I could swallow pills to end it and there were moments I was close.

I was trapped inside my body. A body that was betraying me. A body that was drawing attention to itself and not the type of attention any teenager wants.

If you are wondering how it is easy for me to stick my fingers down my throat, how it is easy to hurt myself, I suspect this is in large part why. I’ve spent years feeling nothing but pure hatred for my body. It wasn’t because it didn’t look a certain way. It was because it didn’t act a certain way.

There is more to share about these years, but for tonight, this is all I have in me. These memories are painful. They exhaust me.  In some ways, this post has felt more difficult to share than admitting to a decade and a half long eating disorder.

I’ll leave you with some advice or maybe it is a request, especially given all that is happening in the world. Be kind. To yourself and to those around you. Pretending to be okay is not unique to me. It is a way of life for far too many. Behind the pretending, the hiding, the fake smiles, or even the hurtful words coming out of their mouth is pain. Pain that goes so deep you feel like you might drown. Remember that when life is not beautiful or ordinary, it is painful.

You deserve some grace. And so does the person next to you.

Cue ‘OK Not To Be OK’ by Marshmello and Demi Lovato

Uninhibited

To express one’s feelings or thoughts unselfconsciously and without restraint.

This is how I yearn to live. This is how I yearn to love.

But I don’t. At least not the majority of the time.

At some point over the years, it became harder and harder to express both sadness and joy. The tears do not come easily. Excitement does not either.

Lately, though, I’ve been reflecting on the moments where they do come easily, where I feel closer to free. It has been a more recent realization that I even have these moments. They do not happen often, but I think they are happening more often than they used to. For that I am grateful.

In the last 14 months, I can identify very clearly the moments when the tears fell so freely. Saying goodbye to him. My nephew. Born 14 months ago this week. I feel the knot in my throat just writing about it. With him the love was instantaneous and easy. And so is the expression of joy and sadness.

Watching him grow has brought undeniable joy. His giggles. His babbling. His wobbly walking. His growls (yes, he growls 😊). In response, I laugh. I act silly. I bounce around singing Baby Shark.

Leaving him brings pain every single time. I feel sadness for the moments I do not get to see.

This is uncomplicated love. This is love in its purist form. And I feel safe to express the feelings associated with this kind of love. I do not feel shame and I do not hold back.

There is another time I can point to when I experienced a joy so real that it just seeped out of me. My trip to Greece in September 2018. I was surrounded by beauty that seemed surreal. I was truly and completely living in the moment. Unlike any trip I’d ever gone on before, I went to Greece by myself as part of an REI Adventures trip and there I met the 17 other women I would be traveling with. Leading up to the departure and en route, it was both terrifying and liberating at the same time. Once I was there, it was only liberating. Like the love for my nephew, the connection to most of the women was immediate. I felt comfortable opening up and leaning into the vulnerability. By the end of the 10 days we went from strangers to friends and a couple of those friendships have lasted to today.

Why can’t I live this way more often? Why can’t it just come naturally? I want so badly for it to be easy.

Even after years of therapy, most of the time, I’m guarded. The walls are still up. I attach in unhealthy ways. Unless of course you are a baby or a complete stranger that I may or may not ever see again. Ugh.

It is hard to not get paralyzed in the frustration of this realization. To realize it is possible to live so fully, but, yet be aware of how most of the time you don’t. Instead, most of the time you are uncomfortable by the affection from others. Compliments make you noticeably agitated so you follow them with some good ole self-deprecating humor. You feel the need to hide your accomplishments. And when you are hurt, you pretend you saw it coming or you yell, “I didn’t need you”. You grip the figurative wheel a bit tighter to convince yourself you are okay. But why do I have to be okay?

In therapy, I was talking about how I’ve still been unable to cry about my condo flooding. I’ve been unable to feel any real sadness that I lost so many belongings, let alone had to experience it at all. Instead, my mom felt the sadness for me. She could cry for me. I could not cry for myself. On my own behalf.

I found myself saying, “I had to keep it together to get through it. There was no time for breaking down.”

One of my group members asked why I couldn’t do both. Can’t I be sad and still “get through it”? Does sadness mean you are somehow not getting through it? Was there really no time to cope?

The answer is yes. A million times yes. It can be both and there is always time to cope (because, you know, that whole life is gray thing).

I’ve learned that there are conditions that allow me to feel safe to express myself. But maybe there is more to it than safety. Was it not safe to feel sadness or was it that sadness isn’t one of my acceptable emotions to feel? Or maybe it is that we only feel safe when we feel an emotion or behavior that we’ve learned is acceptable. Maybe safety and acceptance is linked.

So I’m here to tell myself (and you if you need to hear this too) that it is absolutely acceptable to feel a full range of emotions when you need to feel them. If I ever flood again, I better have moisture coming from my eyes and not just through my backdoor. 😊

Cue ‘The Emotion’ by BØRNS