As a kid, once upon a time, my
childhood bedroom was upstairs, in our nearly one- hundred- year- old, poorly
insulated house. Summers were tropical rainforests, complete with Minnesota
mosquitoes, keeping me awake. Winters were Arctic, requiring multiple
comforters at night. Long story short: it became next to impossible for me to
sleep up there, in my baby blue- painted, but unhabitable, childhood bedroom.
Eventually, I slept in the living
room, on the pull-out couch.
Fortunately, around the age of
eleven, my family finally decided to replace the house’s deteriorating porch
with the new addition promise of a “family room” and…drum roll please… a newer
childhood bedroom for me.
Granted, it was not painted baby
blue; wood paneling was its motif. And, it was a much smaller square
room, as opposed to the vast pizza oven/deep freeze as my first upstairs
bedroom.
Compromise, okay. I’d deal with it.
At least I got my own room, better
insulated, a place I could really sleep in and await my joyous adolescent years
(can you hear my sarcasm?).
So, after a three-month summer vacation,
spent tearing off the old, replacing it with the new, finally, I had my small
square bedroom. I was giddy. I walked into the empty space, imagining where I’d
place my bed, dresser and vanity.
But before I could get any of my
stuff in, furniture or stuffed animals, my family shoved a gigantic meat
freezer along one entire wall of my bedroom.
That’s right, I said meat freezer,
one of those humungous, topaz-colored models that looked like a full-on coffin.
I think you could probably stick a full-grown man in that sucker, without
needing to do any dismembering.
Handy.
And my family just assumed
(you know what they say about assume) that I would have no issue with
this arrangement. I didn’t have room for some of my bedroom furniture, but hey,
I should be grateful to just get a bedroom, right?
I said that to my eleven-year-old
self, trying to convince her this freezer was not encroaching on my development
in any way. No biggie. I still had my little haven where I could write, read,
draw, listen to music and enter adolescence.
Let’s get the show on the road!
Only, the show was frequently
interrupted by a family member entering my room to extract some frozen meat
from my room.
Oh, Rib-eye tonight, huh?
Meanwhile, I turned twelve. Then
thirteen.
Years of lunches and dinners
brought about by people barging into my room, opening the freezer coffin lid,
chilling the room for about ten minutes after it was closed, and feeling like
my privacy was invaded. My boundaries of separateness as a budding person were
treated as nonexistent. After all, I should be grateful to have a room.
This eight-foot freezer is no
problem; it’s not an issue.
But, as a feisty thirteen-year-old,
I started voicing (whining) my displeasure, attempting to reason with certain
family members, trying to negotiate a relocation for this meat freezer. I was
growing up, getting bigger, needing more space and privacy.
Eventually, my negotiating
(whining) won out. It was finally decided that this large monster would be
moved to the garage, where, in my opinion, it should have resided the entire
time. We also had a basement with plenty of space to inhabit the freezer.
Really, why did it have to
land in my small bedroom, in the first place?
Answer? Because it was convenient.
And here, I learned a lesson about
weak and disrespected boundaries of what is and is not allowed and enforced.
It was simply more convenient to
place the freezer in my bedroom. No one needed to go downstairs, in the dingy
basement to get the wrapped meat. No one needed to go outside to the garage.
Just easy- peasy. Get it from
Sheryle’s room. She doesn’t mind. It’s no big deal.
And besides, the freezer was once kept
on the old porch. It’s the way things have always been done. Why change?
Recognizing any of the
dysfunctional patterns, trampled boundaries or harmful assumptions within you
own life?
Why am I harping about this
freezer, years later? Why can’t I get over it, as many people are wont to say?
Because, sometimes a cigar is not
just a cigar. Sometimes a freezer is not just a freezer.
This large behemoth was a testament
to how there was a resistance to change, to respecting boundaries and to respecting
privacy, as harsh as it sounds. My family did not see me as a separate
individual who needed time, space and privacy to grow. Convenience and
attachment to the familiar status quo were more important than acknowledging that
me, as a child, had a right to develop and discover myself without
encroachment.
To me, subjectively, that freezer
encroached on my time, space and privacy. No one else saw it as an issue,
because it was not an issue to them.
Silly, blown out of proportion,
perhaps? Well, hang on. Because, again, the object, any potential object, is
not just a neutral object. It is a representation to you, to me. And, even if
it is that representation to only you or me, it’s still, nonetheless,
valid.
It often, however, taps into the
greater messages surrounding autonomy, self-esteem, boundaries, people pleasing
and any number of mistaken thoughts and beliefs.
What is that for you? What is your
freezer?
Like I said, I negotiated the
freezer’s removal from my small bedroom. By age fourteen, my room was
freezer-free. However, the issues, the messages and the refusal to allow me to
be me were still in place.
And here I slammed head-on into an
ugly reality many of us confront when it comes to our family dynamics: there
can exist both an inability and an unwillingness for some individuals to view
us with the respect, dignity and healthy treatment we inherently deserve. We
need to face that and deal with how things are.
And then we need to make a choice. How
will you and I treat ourselves, freezer or no freezer, metaphorically speaking?
We can often get talked out the
validity of our experiences, dismissed as being too sensitive, taking things
too seriously, blah, blah, blah. You’ve heard the criticisms in your own life,
right?
If it’s a problem, an issue, a
wound for you, that’s legitimate. If you feel a violation, that
is valid and needs addressing.
If individuals refuse to
acknowledge and validate what is bothering you, then you, all by yourself, need
to come to terms with it for yourself.
Find your own personal meaning.
And, while you are doing so, dare to embrace the real, eternal truth: you are
worth being seen, heard, loved and valued. Don’t let anything convince you
otherwise.
So, yes, I’ve been learning all
about what are my personal feelings and boundaries. I am learning about my
individual value.
All this from a freezer in a
bedroom?
Yes, all this from a freezer in a
bedroom.
Copyright © 2020 by Sheryle Cruse
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