As a kid, I had my
share of permission notes. They applied to any school absence, due to illness,
doctor’s appointments, or family emergencies. They always stated, “Please
Excuse Sheryle…”
I learned, early on,
through these innocent permission notes, to believe I was wrong and needed to
apologize for being myself.
I learned to over-apologize.
I learned- I internalized-
some faulty core beliefs, beliefs that necessitated constant apologies. Things
like…
It’s wrong that I exist. (Therefore, I need to apologize).
Right
out of the gate, I absorbed the lie that my occupancy on the planet was wrong.
Bad.
Sinful. Requiring profuse apologies, because look at me!
Look
at how wrong I am! In the vast history of all wrong-ness, I, surely, was
the most wrong that a person could EVER be!
My
family of origin, however unintentional, communicated to me messages of
inconvenience. I was an inconvenience, ergo, I was wrong and bad. I needed to
say I was wholeheartedly sorry for being myself. I wasn’t directly told I was
wrong or bad. It was more subtle than that. It was the disapproving cues of
frustrated sighs, eye rolls, awkward silences.
Sometimes,
yes, I was screamed at. Sometimes, I was ignored and neglected. It wasn’t
necessarily about any one event; rather; it was cumulative, as most of these
powerful, transformative situations are. It was the constant dripping of
unworthy statements on my psyche’s forehead that gradually built the strong, Fort
Knox argument of my defective place in the world, of how I was never
right.
And
therefore, when you are wrong, what are you supposed to do?
Apologize.
The
tricky thing was, I bought the lie that I was NEVER right, only ALWAYS wrong.
Words- and their powerful connotations like “Always” and “Never” are
inaccurate, harmful troublemakers to our self-esteem issues, no matter who we
are as human beings.
Perhaps
you’ve heard the expression, “Separate your ‘Who’ from
your ‘Do.’”
That
gets right to the root of the issue. We would probably do well to take that
concept into consideration, especially the next time we are tempted to
self-eviscerate because of our personal feelings of worthlessness.
Who
we are and what we do are not the same thing.
Therefore,
we, as human beings do not need to apologize for our existence. Contrary
to what many of us may have been told, due to unhealthy relationships or
dynamics, we are worth taking up space in this world.
We
are here for significant reasons. You and I matter.
However, that truth often
gets lost in the lie of another person.
And so…
I’m unacceptable
because of another person’s pain. (Therefore, I need to apologize).
We get scapegoated and
blamed not because of who we are, but rather, because of someone else’s determination
and definition on who they say we are. If they say we are
something, like we are wrong, bad, unacceptable, sinful, a mistake, etcetera,
and we believe that to be true about ourselves, it can make things much
more convenient and easier for the abusive individual to escape personal
responsibility for their actions.
In short, we take the
blame for another person’s misery, disappointment, and failings.
Being exposed to this
toxic dynamic can, over time, convince us there is no excuse for our existence.
Because we could not perfectly anticipate, meet, and fulfill someone
else expectations or soothe their pain, we are unacceptable. We
need to apologize for who we are, not just for what we did or did
not do.
This harmful setup is not
about us. It is not about what did or did not happen. It is about
the need for us to be wrong and worthy of blame. We become the
scapegoat. Another’s person’s designation and mandate that we are, indeed, to
blame for any situation soon becomes internalized.
We take over blaming
ourselves.
Now we are the
punishing taskmaster.
I don’t
know what else to say for myself. (Therefore, I need to apologize).
Cat got your tongue?
Well, maybe the culprit
isn’t a feline. Maybe it is our abuser who has not only conditioned us
to be powerless, but voiceless, as well.
For those of us
involved in abuse, speaking up for ourselves is a cardinal sin, something we
dare not do, let the wrath of the toxic person be unleashed in our lives,
endangering us for our audacity.
We are forbidden to
speak contrary to our abuser’s allowance. And, of course, the word, “no” is at
the top of that forbidden list of responses.
What is permitted
for us to say?
“I’m
sorry.”
“It’s my
fault.”
“I’m
wrong.”
“I’m bad.”
There is no
negotiating.
So, we can often reach
the conclusion that we have nothing else to say, apart from those few
limited statements. And this dovetails into the next faulty lie we believe…
If I
apologize, I’ll be safe. (Therefore, I need to apologize).
Like praying a child’s
prayer or chanting a soothing chant, we can, somehow, believe that simply obeying
and apologizing, we will be rendered safe and sound.
Of course, it doesn’t
quite work like that. We aren’t kept safe by these verbal forcefields. You and
I are not kept safe by any action we take. It will not be perceived by
our abuser as “good enough.” Over time, the intensity of this message takes its
toll on us. The bombarding message chips away at us further, with no
relenting from our abuser each time we utter our apologies.
So, we often try harder.
Perfectionism,
desperate striving, and overachieving are some of the means, we reason, will
save us. These things, somehow, will magically make us “good enough.”
Oftentimes, however, we
are shattered to realize that it makes no difference.
No matter what, we are
wrong. We are to blame. We are inexcusable.
And we are not safe.
We feel vulnerable, shaking in front of a firing squad that doesn’t stop
shooting at us.
There is
something wrong with me. (Therefore, I need to apologize).
This
is the overarching belief that infects all other faulty and harmful thoughts; something
is irrefutably wrong with us, it cannot be denied or changed.
We
are the problem, not any other person, abusers included.
And so, we need
to apologize. To anyone. To everyone. For anything and everything remotely
connected to us.
It is a disease that
ravages our sense of self, largely because we believe we have no self,
nor any right to self. Why? Because we are wrong. That lie that
we wholeheartedly believe goes as deep as to assert that we are defective.
Nothing can or will
change that. Give up all hope it can or it will.
Part of why this can be
so devastating is that this “wrong-ness” infiltrates all aspects to who we
fundamentally are as individuals. Personality. Value systems. Physical
appearance. Goals. Efforts. Sexuality. Even birth order and gender. We make the
sweeping assertion, somehow, that all is wrong. There is, indeed, nothing
right about us. No matter where we turn, our destiny is wrong.
With that certainty
firmly in place and governing our daily existence, what chance do you
are I truly have at achieving a happy and fulfilling life?
It looks quite bleak,
doesn’t it?
The “Who
From the “Do:”
This discernment
challenge is a daily practice. We need to separate our inherent being
from our real- life activity of doing.
For those of us who
have not had the luxury of living an existence filled with unconditional love
and acceptance, this can be quite the hard task. We don’t know what
unconditional love and acceptance feels like. We don’t know a
reality that does not include unrealistic expectations, harshness, rejection,
perfectionistic standards, and disproportionate responses, such as anger.
Other harmful
individuals may have convinced us we weren’t safe and worthwhile unless and
until we conformed to them. We learned we needed to give in. We needed
to stop being ourselves and start being the vague definition and
image of who they wanted us to be.
And here’s a secret:
they already, somehow, determined we would fail at that mission.
So, who and do were one
and the same for us. The was no differentiation; there was no separation. There
was no grey area, whatsoever. Just unforgiving, unrelenting, black and white.
Therefore, we need to
give ourselves the permission to live in the grey, daily. We need to
remind ourselves we already have inherent worth. Our existence is more
than enough evidence of that. We are here for a number of important, legitimate
reasons, even if we don’t know what they are just yet.
And while we are
waiting for answers, we are worthwhile. And we have stuff to do.
Enter, then, the second
part of the challenging assignment; we need to let ourselves of the hook, in
all of our doing.
So, perhaps, here’s a
friendly little equation we would do well to keep in mind and apply often:
Our inherently
worthy, imperfect human selves plus our worthwhile and imperfect deeds equals
our valuable lives.
Indeed, we are
inherently worthy, as individuals. But that doesn’t mean we have nothing to
offer, action-wise.
On the contrary,
in fact.
Therefore, each day, as
we go about our lives, it’s important to remember our inherent being, that
nothing and no one can change or diminish, AND our inherent power to
contribute, even if that contribution is imperfect. Nothing about
us is worth negating. Nothing.
We do not need to be
excused for our existence. We need to be celebrated for it.
If no one, therefore,
has celebrated you for you, then, please, let me be the first.
I’m so glad you
are here!
Copyright © 2021 by
Sheryle Cruse
“I’m Sorry
(But Should I Be)?” tackles the harmful messages compelling many of us
to over-apologize.
www.elephantjournal.com/2020/12/"I'm
Sorry (But Should I Be)?" tackles the harmful messages compelling many of
us to over-apologize. | elephant journal
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