Is
it true; is it kind, or is it necessary?”
Socrates
Words.
Words heal. Words kill.
We have all heard the expression, “If you don’t have anything
nice to say, don’t say anything at all.”
Yet life isn’t that simple when it comes to what is said to
us, is it?
And nothing gets the painful ball rolling quite like
hearing certain things from our childhood, often beginning with our family of
origin. For here is where seeds get planted, lies get told as truths,
and issues are born long before we realize them as such.
Some examples?
“You’re ugly. / “You’re
fat.”
Almost from the start of our
arrival on the planet, we are assessed and judged by our appearance.
Boy/Girl.
Healthy/Unhealthy.
And soon, before we know it…
Cute/Ugly.
Thin/Fat.
Value determinations are right
alongside of these simple, yet powerful, words. We are often taught, usually at
the speech of a trusted adult, that we aren’t good enough because of how we
look in their estimation.
And it has nothing to do
with who we are… and everything to do with who they are.
Consider
the Source:
Hello, Projection.
Some of us with disordered food,
weight, and body image issues, indeed, have endured this kind of projection.
Perhaps there was a parent who struggled with his/her own weight, and, instead
of dealing with those issues directly, saw an answer or a release valve in
shaming us when we were small children.
Doing so, perhaps, allowed the
adult parent to still self-hate and be critical but take no responsibility for
his/her personal behavior. Placing the blame on someone external, even if that
is a small child, redirects the source of the problem. Yes, it’s the child’s
fault, not mine.
So, there are those of us who have
absorbed the harmful lie that there is something wrong with us. We are fat. We
are ugly. We are bad. We are wrong. We should work on fixing that,
a/k/a, fixing Mommy or Daddy, to make things right.
It’s our job to do so, after all.
Our childlike mind cannot withstand anything contrary to that punishing
job description.
We want to be good boys and girls,
right?
“You’re stupid.”
After our very image has been
assaulted as children, what can usually come next is our intellect. Think about
how many times you, perhaps, were told, “You’re stupid.”
And it is sometimes accompanied
with the following question:
“Can’t you do anything
right?
These commentaries attack or core
being. Essentially, we, as children, can often absorb the message, “I’m too
stupid to live, be loved, and to have self-worth.” That realized language may
come later as we mature and even enter therapy.
But, make no mistake, as innocent
children, we internalize the visceral experience solely as a defect in us.
We believe there is something inherently wrong with us.
We’re “too stupid” for it to be otherwise.
Consider
the Source:
People
sometimes do not have our best interests at heart. In fact, sometimes, they
live to have our worst interests motivating their behaviors.
Now, add the devastating factor of a so-called
trusted adult, parent, or authority figure to the equation and see just
how damaging the results can be!
Jealousy,
insecurity, and schadenfreude (the term used to describe someone who delights
in another’s pain or misfortune) are not limited to adult-on-adult
relationships and interactions. No, often, their tentacles can spread from a fully
grown adult, jealous, and insecure of the child within his/her midst.
For
instance, a mother recognizes the special gifts and talents in her daughter. Those
gifts and talents may be a high I.Q., a unique creativity, or a precocious
communication style, so far advanced for the child’s tender years, that this
adult gets threatened by it.
The
adult may, indeed, feel “less than” whenever she is in her child’s presence.
Insecurity, jealousy, and a need to “level,” to “take the child down a peg or a
notch” becomes all-consuming.
If
the adult cannot rise to that level of brilliance or intellect, naturally,
according to the insecure parent, the only recourse is to eviscerate the
child’s giftings and sense of self, so that the child, indeed, is the “less
than” individual in the parent-child relationship.
“You’re worthless.”
This harmful statement is often
uttered on the part of the parent and/or trust adult authority figure. It comes
across, via image and performance-focused issues.
Some of us are told it outright. Some of us get the insidious constant message, communicated daily to us.
We are inundated with beliefs like, “I don’t look the way I’m supposed to
look,” “I don’t act the way I’m supposed to act,” “I’m wrong,” and “I can never
do anything right.”
Therefore, it’s not too long before
we draw the conclusion, if it isn’t dictated directly to us, “I’m worthless.”
Consider
the Source:
Who
told/taught you that?
Again,
who is the first author of this harmful belief, directed our way?
We
learned it from somewhere, from someone, after all.
But,
perhaps just as important of a question is “Why did they
tell/teach you that?”
Again, it’s important to recognize that
another person’s motivation, be they trusted parent or any other adult in our
young lives, may not be noble, healthy, or loving.
When
an adult, especially a parent, to a child, insists that child is value-less, defective,
or only as good as the last thing achieved or perceived (focusing on the
elusive image and perfectionistic mandates), it screams more of that adult’s
inferior sense of self.
And
again, that adult may wrongly determine the solution to their poor self-
image is to make the child’s self-image worse.
It’s
the adult’s issue, not the child’s. That is, unless and until, through abuse of
the power and the charge the adult has over the child, the young and innocent
party is now inheriting the unresolved issued of previous generations.
And
the child doesn’t question why it’s happening, often times, because they
implicitly trust that their parents, teachers, coaches and other “respected
authority figures “know what they’re doing, love me, and want the best for me.”
In
an ideal world, yes.
But
do we live in that world?
Is That So?
These three little words can begin
a relief-inspiring process of healing, if we are open to it, if we are willing
to challenge the “reality” which appears to be so intimidating.
“Is That So?”
Incorporating these three words,
saying them out loud to ourselves, and even to others can, indeed, place
us on a path of heathier self-perception and choices.
You and I were fed any number of
lies and harmful beliefs about who we were in the world. Many of us have been
wrestling with that daunting setup since childhood.
When we were children, there was
little we could do to fight against that harshness. The adults had the power,
the ability, the control, and the force to execute whatever misguided, abusive,
and evil will they desired to inflict upon us.
But we are adults now, empowered to
choose something different, if, for no other reason, than to honor
that long silenced and neglected child. The question is “Will we do that?”
Consider
the Source:
As you and I consider each harmful source,
speaking each harmful word into our lives, will we create another source, all
our own? Will it be ourselves, someone who, when questioned if we are
worthy already, someone who will confidently respond with an
authentic and brave “yes?”
Let’s start being that kind
of authentic and brave source right now, right where we are!
Copyright © 2020 by
Sheryle Cruse
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