I’ve just returned from one of the most amazing and fun weekends of my life. In my previous post, I talked about Setting the Tone for Connections. The realizations I express there helped lead me to the ones I'm describing here.
As I’m catching up via text with one of my close friends, Zach, I tell him how Mike Veny helped me realize some major things this weekend through our conversations and then through my own reflection. Zach asks:
I may have been able to put these realizations into the space of a screenshot, but they are truly huge for me.
Mike and I were taking a moment on the balcony to reflect and take in the scenery while we were on campus at the University of Vermont for the 4th Annual Young Adult Voice Movement Conference. The participants were having fun inside, dancing to loud music and watching themselves on the projector screen. Mike had just given his presentation on feeling disconnected, and the combination of the presentation, the setting, and the wonderful energy from the participants made it a safe and welcome place to talk about whatever was on our mind. One of the things that Mike talks about in his mental health presentations is the huge difference we feel when talking about our challenges in “safe places” vs. the rest of the world. I intentionally put “safe places” in quotations because Mike and I envision that everyone has the ability to work towards transparent relationships which are inherently safe, non-judging, and trusting. As I felt the tears well up in my eyes as I answered his question, I also felt a simultaneous comfort knowing that even if I were crying in the middle of the room - of what was then dancing young adults - wouldn’t be judged. I was in a safe place.
Leading up to this conference, I’d talked to Mike a couple of times about how I felt disconnected all of the time, and how painful it felt. Now that we had a moment in person, he was asking for clarification of my feelings.
“You know, it’s funny,” he started. “One of the things that struck me when I first met you is that you were connected, so why do you feel so disconnected?”
Such a simple question, and a natural one for him to ask at that. When we first met back in October of last year, we clicked right away. Our first conference together, people were asking me, “so do you go to every conference with Mike?” We worked so fluidly together that our fellow participants had no idea we had just met. You can’t fake that.
He got me thinking about the answer to that question. Why did I feel so disconnected? I am not very close with my family, and I know that this is part of the disconnected feeling, but lately I’ve made peace with the relationships I have with my family members, at least for right now. Despite the pain it has caused me in the past, this wasn’t the reason. And for years now, I have considered four people, two of them women, two of them men, my best friends. I have four best friends and have made some new friends since January that are great people who will be in my life for at least a few years. So why did I feel so disconnected?
When I took stock of the relationships that I had, that were great, that made me feel good, the only relationship missing was that of a significant other. This is the disconnected feeling that hurts me so much. If I could sum it up, I’d say that as I have grown into an awesome person, by my own definition, it pains me that my Mr. Right hasn’t just found me somehow to sweep me off of my feet. I write it that way on purpose. I need to see how silly, childish, and impatient this is. To top it off, I also currently know that I’m not even ready for that relationship yet. I’m not ready for any serious romantic relationship, and despite how my heart feels, I believe it would be wrong of me to get seriously involved because of the intense personal growth I am feeling.
I am not disconnected, nor unloved, nor ignored. I am simply focusing my atte
ntion to a self-deemed inappropriate place, and then masking that painful, impatient feeling through comments that will pull people closer to me, like saying “I am sad because I feel so disconnected.” I don’t need to tell you that this is backwards as all hell.
It feel fantastically amazing to have a better understanding of this, and to feel how I am already losing some of the weight of me clinging to this “disconnected” feeling.
The second realization is humorously just as backwards. At least to me it is.
As a child and teen, I was a shit-talking bully. As an adult, I’ve traded the bully behavior for withdrawn behavior. As a child I would lash out at people so that they would feel some of the pain I felt, as an adult I decided to swing the pendulum all the way over, withdraw myself from people, and then I couldn’t hurt them. When I decided to start doing this, I was tired of hurting people close to me. I had also been politely told by my two best lady friends, separately, that they were hesitant to introduce me to new people or invite me to parties literally because they were afraid I would not “play nice” and I would be a heinous bitch. It was quite the painful, but necessary, wake up call.
I’ve had a lot of trouble finding balance between the two places, and I’ve had trouble expressing the way I feel towards the people I love. I feel that this comes from a huge lack of positive examples of expressions of love and affection when I was a child. I recognize that I interact with loved ones mostly the way my dad does: not often, a bag of emotions when I do, and some underplaying “bro talk” to lighten the feeling of delivering a heartfelt message. It’s common for me to call my close friends “fuckers.” I do find humor in this, but I recognize that I also say it because it’s not overly sentimental, and that’s more comfortable for me.
However, while I might communicate with you like a “bro,” I am still a woman. By modeling my behavior after my dad - who was more connected with us than our mom - I have pulled myself away from some of the words and behaviors I want to receive by unconsciously setting a tone of separateness or setting emotional boundaries.
Physically, I can recall multiple times in my life where I may as well have been fla
t out begging for attention or an embrace in my head, but was unconscious of the distant and detatched verbal and nonverbal communication I was sending to my audience. Maybe I was with a guy I liked, and I realllllly wanted to cuddle on the couch, but I was so afraid of being rejected that I might keep my distance from him while continuing to secretly hope that he would come to me. I wish I was kidding about this, but this is something I struggle with to this day.
These two realizations have brought my mind a feeling of clarity and hope that I haven’t felt in a long, long time. Mike, I can’t thank you enough for being you, and for asking a simple question that deserved an honest answer. I’ve already started changing the way I talk to people, and I’ve seen some positive results. I’m reminding myself of something I truly believe in my heart - that you don’t find love when you’re looking for it. I have to focus on myself and find my inner balance, purpose, and happiness before I can expect myself to be the woman that my man deserves. I write it that way because I really do feel like I still have some big growing up to do before I’m the woman that the kind of man I want wants to be with. It has been a tough, but liberating realization.
I am going to be a happier and more fulfilled person if I find and develop my passions now and then incorporate my relationship into them, instead of cultivating a relationship and then trying to fit my passions into it after.
I am not disconnected, I am simply uncomfortable in my current growth because so much is changing. But it is changing for the better, it is changing in the ways that I want, and if I have the patience and focus to stay on track I will be happier later than I ever thought I could be before.
I am also not alone. I am not alone in my feelings or my struggles, and I am not the first person nor the last to feel them and go through them. Knowing I am not alone then, whenever I feel alone, it is most likely my own lack of focus or fabrication leading me to feel that way. I LOVE this, because it means I don’t have to feel that way any more. Neither do you. :-D
I am setting the tone for the relationships I want by maintaining my mental focus.
I am setting the tone for the relationships I want by maintaining my mental focus.
What attitude or perspective has held you back from something you wanted?