Tag Archives: new attitude

The Changing, Part II: I Got a New Attitude, Bee-yotches!

Listen up, bee-yotches.  In my last post, I gave a eulogy for the past incantations of me.  It was surprisingly hard to do especially as I’m in the midst of grieving for her/them/the past/all the years lost/winter being over, but I needed to have some temporary finality on the subject.  And, since I’m a writer, I find that I figure things out best by writing about them.

Now, today is my birthday.  Longtime readers know that I have a tempestuous relationship with my birthday.  I disliked it as a kid, positively loathed it through my twenties and early thirties as it was a nasty reminder of the fact that I was, yes, indeed, alive in body and that I was a year older with nada to show for it.  In the last five years or so, I had been slowly working my way to being neutral about my birthday.  I didn’t love it, but I didn’t hate it any more.

Last year, I returned to struggling with it, and it’s been even harder this year.  Why?  Well, first of all, it’s a round number–40.  Now, I have never cared about my actual age.  In fact, at the beginning of the year, I just say I’m a year older in order to prep myself for my birthday.  Of course, then when my birthday arrives, I sometimes get confused as to how old I really am, but that’s neither here nor there.

40.  That’s old.  Or at the very least, middle-aged.

I fixate on certain things (no, really?), and apparently, 40 is one of those things.  I keep staring at the number as if it’s an alien being with three heads.  It doesn’t look anything like I feel.  On the one hand, I wasn’t taught healthy ways to navigate the world when I was younger, and I stayed frozen in time for fifteen years.  So, on that hand, I feel very young, as if I’m just learning to walk.  On the other hand, I’ve experienced things that I sincerely would not wish on someone I loathed because the way back is just so long and arduous.  I feel as if I’ve been alive forever, so on that hand, I feel very old.

40?  How can I be 40?  What the Hades happened to my twenties and thirties?  For that matter, where are my aughts and teens?


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The Space In-Between

I have always been a black and white kinda gal.  Or, if I am going to be completely honest, I’ve always been a black and blacker kinda gal.   In my world, you were friend or you were foe.  You were with me or you were against me.  Binary thinking?  Oh, hell, yeah.  I had it down cold.  Choolie pointed out that many people with PTSD react that way because their warning system is broken.  It makes sense.  Once a person is attacked, that person will do anything she can not to be attacked again.  So, any little threat is perceived as a big threat.  I’m like my own personal Homeland Security color alert in action.  Except, instead of always being at Level Boehner (Orange), I am constantly at Level OH MY FUCKING GOD I’M UNDER MOTHERFUCKING ATTACK.

Or, to be more precise, I was.

I had my therapy session Wednesday afternoon, and I was marveling at how much work my mom and I have done this summer.  We have been able to talk honestly about past issues without either of us freaking out or fleeing.   That led to me talking about how sad I was for the woman I used to be.  She was so damaged and scared that she had to continually shrink her world in order to keep the perceived threats at manageable.  And even then, her fear was overwhelming.

She never believed she had the right to live or that she had any positive impact on anyone or anything.  She never imagined a future because she was too busy trying to think of a reason not to kill herself pretty much every day.  She hated everything about herself and couldn’t fathom that anyone could really love her.  She figured her friends were just being nice to her when they stood by her.  By the way, major shout-out to my long-term friends who have always accepted me as I was.  It’s in a large part thanks to you that I’m still here.

The past me.  She thought she was scarred, damaged beyond repair, unlovable, ugly, grotesque, and for the most part, a monster.  Her mantra was to first do no harm, but because she believed that she was a detriment to the world, it was impossible to follow her mantra.  So, she did her best to minimize the toxins she was releasing into the world by doing as little as possible.

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