You know those people in the grocery
check out line that will share intimate details of their lives with
whomever is standing near and willing to listen? That's how I grew
up. My mother is that person and from her I inherited this penchant
for unhealthy boundaries.
When I realized I had this
habit I was embarrassed.
I found it ugly, weak.
Strong, healthy people don't need to share their pain with strangers.
I've worked for years on being more
mindful and through self-introspection I've changed some of my
habits. What I've recently learned though is that I work through my
pain by sharing and there's nothing wrong with that. It's not ugly or
weak, it's who I am and I'm strong. I share while teaching as a story
organically unfolds that relates to where the class is in that
moment, through my writing, or talking to friends. It's how I process
and move through painful shit that life throws at me. My need to
share too much still arises occasionally, thank God I have good
friends who gently call me out (sometimes unknowingly) when I'm
seeking attention inappropriately.
What do I do with my pain?
I write, I cry, I rage,
and eventually I move through it.
It's what I do.
I believe we all have the
ability to choose, holding with a vice-like grip to our pain or to
face it and, when it's time, loosen the grip. Pain, suffering, it's
going to reach each of us, it's part of our human existence, but I
don't want that pain to define me. Ultimately I want love to define
me and for that to happen I need to move through the darkness and
into the light.
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