I feel like I have to
prove to the world that I’m worthless. It’s like, that’s how I see myself and
nobody else seems to agree; no one else seems to be buying into that idea.
Which I really don’t get, because for about seven years, I was made fun of
everyday. I’m not exaggerating. I was literally made fun of every single day
from, like, 4th grade until I was a junior in High School. Life was
hell. Every day I woke up with a knot in my stomach wondering “where it was
going to come from today,” or “who’s going to be making fun of me today?” or
“how many people are going to laugh when I break another chair again…?” The
message of all the insults, ridicule and bullying was loud and clear – “Micah,
you don’t fit in here; you don’t fit in anywhere. You’re fat and disgusting and
no one wants anything to do with you. We’d all be better off if we didn’t have
to look at you.” And I accepted that. They were right. I WAS fat and
disgusting. I knew that. I could see it myself when I looked in the mirror. I
agreed with them.
Then, little by little,
during my junior year of high school, there were less and less insults. Fewer
and fewer people seemed to be interested in teasing me. Maybe they were just
bored with it. Or maybe they were “growing up.” The strange thing is, while the
insults stopped, the message that I wasn’t acceptable didn’t. Okay, so people
were no longer making fun of me outright, but there seemed to be a whole new
method of reminding me that I wasn’t worth much. It was typified in conversations
that I overheard from girls, mostly. They frequently talked about boys they
liked and it was always the thin, athletic, good-looking guys they were fawning
over. Okay, message received – girls aren’t into fat guys, got it. Being
avoided and excluded can be just as isolating and hurtful as being pointed at
and laughed at.
I’m pretty sure part of
me is writing this so people will feel sorry for me, which has been my “go to” coping
mechanism for quite some time. It’s why/how I became addicted to self-pity. It felt
great to say, “See? I’m the victim. I was innocent and the ‘world’ did this to
me – so everyone should feel sorry for me and even admire me for what I’ve been
through,” as if my suffering has been a nobly endured self-sacrifice. What a
load of crap! Basically it was me saying, I was hurt, therefore, I’m not
responsible for anything that happens in my life.
But then who’s to blame
for all this hurt? Who’s to blame for everything going wrong? Paradoxically -
Me. It has to be my fault, because I’m the only one that I can truly punish. I
can’t punish my parents. I can’t punish my friends. I can’t punish Heavenly
Father. But me? “Me” I can punish. “Me” I can blame. After all, I never would
have been made fun of if I had been thin. I would have been one of the guys the
girls wanted to be with if I had been athletic and attractive. So it WAS my
fault. I wasn’t good enough. I didn’t measure up and I had no one to blame for
that but me. “Oh, but you have such a great personality,” people have said. Uh…
yeah, sure, whatever. Too bad a good personality wasn’t enough to be
acceptable, otherwise why would I have been teased so mercilessly? Clearly,
appearances are much more important than people are willing to admit.
So… I learned to be a
worthless victim, which helped me to survive, but it also made me miserable. It
also led me to establish a pattern of reacting to everything in life with a
negative mindset. Life is a series of obstacles that are too hard for me. My
focus is always on what I can’t do or why I can’t do it – i.e., making excuses
(to stay safe). You see, I learned in church that if something was right, then
Heavenly Father would help you by lifting the burden and making it light, i.e.,
making it easy. So if something in my life was too hard, it meant I was doing
something wrong, because I wasn’t receiving help. Or, for whatever reason, I
wasn’t deserving of help. And the
“I’m worthless…” cycle continued. Made all the more painful at the thought that
I have a loving Father in Heaven who doesn’t think I’m worth enough to help.
Of course, nobody likes
a wet blanket, so I learned pretty quick to “have the appearance” that
everything is okay and not to let anyone know that I’m really suffering. So I
became a pretty good liar, for the most part. Fast forward to today when I’ve
played my part so well that I’ve completely snowed everyone into thinking that
I’m confident and capable. So much so
that people actually treat me that way and it’s just weird. People actually
treat me like I’m capable and are even complementary at times. What?!? When did
this happen? Don’t we still live in a world where I’m the fat loser that
everyone hates and is disgusted by? How is it that the same world that beat me
down as a little kid, grew up and now treats me with respect? And what, I’m
supposed to just change all that overnight? No way! They hurt me. They can’t
just change their minds and say, “oh, so now we think you are pretty awesome
and we want you to believe in yourself.” What?!? Excuse me?!? You can’t just
change your mind like that. If you’re gonna hate me, then hate me and keep
hating me, but don’t hate me for a little bit, then decide that you want to
change your mind and start treating me like I’m someone deserving of respect.
It’s like the worst joke you can play on someone – make them believe they are
one thing, then once they have fully embraced that, make a complete reversal
and tell them they’re something else.
There are so many hard
things about being in this situation, but one of, if not, THE hardest thing to
deal with is what’s going on inside of me. There’s that guy inside of me
asking, “okay, so the world is giving you mixed signals – but what do YOU want
to believe? Who do YOU want to be?” And right now, I don’t know. I’m struggling
to know how to answer those questions. I’ve relied on outside opinions to tell
me who I am for so long that I’ve lost the ability to choose that for myself.
Or maybe it’s in there somewhere, but just atrophied from lack of use.
I’ve believed for so
long that I was meant to be unhappy, as if it were an unspoken commandment
meant only for people like me – “…but thou? Thou shalt be unhappy.” “Men are
that they might have joy… unless you’re fat, then all bets are off!”
The other thing that’s
hard is that I played the victim in order to avoid responsibility, when in reality, I am the only one who can be
responsible for me, including being responsible for what I believe. Talk about
a cruel irony! Being fat wasn’t/isn’t the problem. Being made fun of wasn’t the
problem. Being told I was “worthless” wasn’t the problem. The problem was that
I chose to believe it. It was MY choice. No one forced me to internalize that
belief. When someone made fun of me, I could just as easily have said, “you’re
wrong.” But I didn’t. I was/am far too sensitive. I want people to be happy and
I’m willing to “be wrong” if it means making someone else happy to be right.
But discounting myself has a cost and I’ve been paying that price my whole
life.
I was so busy looking
for someone else to tell me that I was okay, that I never learned how to tell
myself that I’m okay. And no, Heavenly Father doesn’t help by making things
easy, but He does help. And He isn’t up there, sitting His throne, waiting for
me to mess up so that he can either punish me or intervene, He’s right here
with me, encouraging me and doing all He can, in spite of the limitations I put on Him, to help me. Men ARE that they might have joy, but they also
have to have bad days. I don’t think that scripture meant that we should only
be feeling joy and if we don’t, then we’re doing something wrong. I think it
just means that joy is a worthwhile endeavor – that it’s okay to live in such a
way that produces joy. This world was created to hold all the good AND the bad
and it was a part of the plan to experience both. Things aren’t hard for me
because I’m worthless and undeserving, things are hard because I’m human and
mortal. Things aren’t hard because I made some horrible mistake by being born fallible;
they are hard because that’s just how it was designed. Just because something
is hard, doesn’t mean I’ve done something wrong. And besides, from the very
beginning, help was there – promised even.
And there’s no denying
that I’ve been helped. There’s no denying that I’m still here. After all the
crap I’ve been through and all the times I
contemplated being done with this world and my miserable existence, I’m still
here. (And trust me when I say that the teasing was a walk in the park compared to some other things I’ve been through, it’s just that the other things are far too personal to share at this point!) I’m learning, I’m changing, I'm messing up sometimes and getting things right sometimes, I have good days and bad days, and so on and so forth, and isn't that what this life is really all about?
2 comments:
hugs, Micah...I love you. I understand, maybe not completely but I relate to so much of what you have written.
I'm glad you updated your blog. I like reading it. It makes me feel.
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