she was the best of me, until I ripped her heart out
the subtlety with which dismissal comes does not negate the impact of its blow
I’m not sure I ever was a child. Memories of that little girl are fuzzy, possibly even false constructions of imagination and stories I’ve been told about myself over the years.
Somewhere, early on, I have to think I was a child who hoped, a child who approached the beauty in the world with bemused awe. I assume I didn’t always fear the gaze of strangers, and I could probably ramble on about my little girl hopes and dreams, never fathoming that one day others would use those things against me.
I used to have stuffed animals lining my bed. I slept with all of them. They all had names and lives and little personalities. They kept me company; I told them my secrets, and they told me their stories.
I loved them all. In the unabashed, wholehearted way that kids can love anything.
Love as a child has no consequence; it’s innate, it’s happy, it’s safe. Or at least it is when directed towards a cohort of cute inanimate objects.
I was loved as a child by my parents, smothered by my mother, who used to write me these cute notes about missing me when I was away at my dad’s house.
And to the best of his capability, my dad loved me too.
But it was different from one day to the next, from one house to the next; it changed. Love didn’t show up the same in both homes. It was, at most times, rather starkly unbalanced. And I don’t remember it being this way. But I can feel the two halves of self within who were raised entirely separately. I couldn’t tell you how child me made sense of these differences she perceived but had no language to explain.
Mostly, I felt alone. Countless grandparents, 4 parents, 3 peripheral siblings, two houses, different friends in different neighborhoods. People surrounded me, overwhelmed me with their incohesion, and the ephemeral way in which they popped in and out of my life. So, protectively, I coiled inward.
The ever-present narrative in my head, that voice that cuts and dissects the world around me and jumbles up my perspective of reality - that’s always been with me. Guiding me, motivating me, torturing me, yes. But my primary companion all the same.
Sure, it’s panicked in the face of fears; it’s offered little grace to mistakes big and small. It’s warped my relationship with my body and my understanding of self.
It’s not always been a friend, more often than not I’d consider it foe.
It lives to serve, though, protecting me in its ironclad embrace.
I spent many nights as a young girl sitting in bed, crying softly to myself and imagining the physical labor of building up my mental walls. Brick by brick.
I would reassure myself that no one could reach me here. No one could hurt me here.
I built us an infallible tower to call home. Just me and the voice together. It promised there we’d always be safe.
My companion started as an external monologue. When I was 3, my mom lost a child that would’ve been my younger brother in earnest. Someone to traverse these two worlds by my side, someone who, I imagined, would be my real-life companion. Someone who would know all of me.
It started with him. I would babble to him at night, willing him to be there with me. Willing him to see that I was unhappy. Willing him to answer and tell me it would all be okay.
Over time, the monologue became my own as childish abstractions gave way to grander truths about life. And my companion donned a proper name, befitting of its control on my psyche.
Anxiety.
And even the rich childhood whimsy that cloaked the ever-present voice in something friendly crumbled before the diagnosis.
Anxiety.
So it really was just all in my head.
Maybe I was a sensitive kid. Maybe I was an empathizer beyond my stature. Maybe I was particularly vulnerable by nature and not just by nurture.
It seems silly and dramatic to write about my childhood woes when they came with an abundance of care and privilege. But when those very privileges are weaponized against you and used to invalidate your existence, they breed guilt and submission just the same.
Who am I to be so unhappy?
I could intuit the flaws in the system that raised me, but they comprised my life. They didn’t feel loud or dramatic. There is no one moment of trauma or abuse that explains it all away.
I was simply raised in the perfect storm of people and their insecurities. They whirled like tornadoes around me, battering me, throwing me up and down, left and right, until I could do no more than resign to whatever came next.
Chaos churned the waters I swam in. Lies, deceptions, cowardice, and guilt raised one half of me. Sugarcoating, passiveness, spoiled allowance, and devotion raised the other.
I suppose that makes it unsurprising that I don’t remember anything but surviving. That I struggle to make sense of who I am.
Loved and yet left.
A pride and yet a sorrow.
I had no right to hurt; I never could find the words to convey how or why I felt the way I did. I left too many exploitable gaps in my explanations. My fault.
But before you pity me, fret not. Anxiety talked me through it all.
Kids are black and white. There is right, and there is wrong. There is mine, and there is yours. There is happy, and there is sad. We’re raised that way because it’s the simplest way for adults to elucidate what it means to be alive in this world.
It’s only when you finally emerge into the grey murky waters of autonomy that you realize, wait, I was never taught how to swim.
Kids sense nuance and disturbance far more perceptibly than adults, so I’ve never understood how adults can be so naïve as to think their kids don’t see through them as easily as looking through glass.
Or maybe that’s just it, kids see too deeply into their parents, reflecting back all that they fear so deeply. The only thing they can manage to do with that vulnerability is what their childhood taught them, and shut it down.
But the subtlety with which dismissal comes does not negate the impact of its blow.
Even I have grown accustomed to dismissing my inner child. Her needs are tired and stale. Her whining is exasperating. Her interests are inane. And too often she asks me to rehash old wounds.
Old wounds that I reopen anyway by shrugging her off.
She gets it, though; ignorance being an all too familiar space. She never complains.
That is, until adult me is treated like child me once was. Only then does she kick up one hell of a storm on our behalf. Anger, shame, regret, defiance, sorrow, deflection, guilt… she presses on them all in her fit to be acknowledged.
I try to tame her, to contain her, to smother her in logic and half-hearted placations.
Shhhhh, I say, this isn’t the time.
It never is, she whispers back.
-June
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and here you are living despite it all...
I got my first tattoo the day I turned 18. It’s a single-line poem by Rupi Kaur, “and here you are living despite it all…”
the unseen and the seen
The previous evening’s wholeness drained from me as my liminal space lost oxygen, and I knew I was about to be suffocated.
They had packed my bags.
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Thank you for this. I totally resonate with the tornado piece of it.
As usual, the depth to which you express your feelings and inner truths have struck me to the core. You shine light on the paths that even I have a hard time fully seeing in myself at times. Anxiety can definitely be a frenemie. Sometimes I value her and learn with her; sometimes I want her to give me some damn space.
& wow the part about being raised in a “perfect storm” really hits home. So much of my teens and 20s have been an identity crisis designed by the influence of two polar opposite parents.
You are a remarkable soul June and your writing has brought a sense of solidarity that I haven’t found yet in this context until now.🪻
P.s. I loved my stuffed animals too and I’ve found my way back to having a few special ones that I currently keep on my couch 🧸🎀