Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Fearful

The Edge, anti-me, the overseer, they are all ways that I have deflected and misdirected myself from clearly stating what's really at the core of the issues that I use this space to look at in as unflinching manner as I can handle at the moment. 

Fear. 

That's the core of so much that I've been wrestling with over the last couple of years. I've been scared to engage life in a certain way. I've gone off and pursued all kinds of different things to avoid dealing with things that are scary. And the worst part is that I really had nothing to be afraid of in the first place. The fears were almost entirely a product of broken beliefs about myself and how other people experience me. At some point I became convinced that bad things would happen to me if I did not conform just so to certain expectations. The only problem was I really had no idea of what those expectations were. So I've been inventing things in my head for all these years and feeling bad about myself when I failed to meet those expectations. 

The pattern is pervasive. Everything in my life is in some way affected by these self-imposed limits. I've put the fewest limits on myself professionally, but that's also where expectations and acceptable behaviors are relatively well-defined. I didn't have to invent anything in my head. There's also lots of objective feedback in a professional environment. This feedback reduced the disparity between how I see myself and how others see me. It's really no wonder that sports and school have always been my comfort zone. Rules are defined. The desired outcomes are clearly defined. There was less space for me to wonder if I was doing the right thing.

As I've recognized that my fear of social shame, rejection by somebody else, or simple self-loathing are grounded in some ephemeral notion of "right" that I developed deep in my youth, I have been able to recognize the urge to give into that pathetic voice. When I hear it, I stop and really think about why I'm feeling afraid (I'm being very deliberate in my use of words associated with fear), I can talk myself out of simply responding to the environment in my standard way and do the thing that really needs doing. I have some examples to illustrate what I mean.

Saturday night was my daughter's Father/Daughter Dance. This was a very important event for her, so I went into it very aware of how my behavior could impact her experience. When we got there, we saw plenty of adults that I knew. My fearful self felt like I needed to chat with these people, participate in the social milieu because that's pretty much what everybody else was doing. Nope, this was about my daughter. I wanted to do what she wanted. So I hung out with her, I talked to her, and I danced with her as much as I wanted. I didn't worry about what the other dads were thinking. I did crazy dances with her, asked her what she wanted to do. I let the night be about her (rather than me, which was my old way, to make sure I did whatever I needed to do to alleviate the fears that I was feeling in the moment). By the end of the night, I think a few of the other dads were jealous. Their daughters were busy playing with their friends and wanted nothing to do with dad. My daughter was still excited about the dance the next day. I felt good about that. It made me feel like I had done my job well. 

My son plays baseball. Last year I experienced all kind of anxiety every time he was at bat. I wasn't nervous for him as much as I was nervous for me. I didn't want people to judge me for his performance. I wanted him to perform at a certain level so I could feel better about myself and not have to worry about what other people thought. I wasn't so interested in who he was and loving him for that, but getting him to become who I needed him to be to relieve my fears and satisfy my petty emotional needs. Then I realized that so much of what I've been struggling with was a consequence of not feeling like who I am was enough for the people who were supposed to love me no matter what. I had to be what they wanted and hide everything else or they wouldn't love me anymore. I had to make things easy for them so they would accept me and make me feel loved. I didn't want to do that to him, so I decided to focus on what he did well in a baseball game and not worry too much about everything else. I also had to recognize how hard last year was for him (he got hit with the ball a couple of times) and to give him time to get comfortable. I was rushing him back to hard last year. I never really listened to him, I never gave him time to feel afraid. I didn't want to acknowledge his fear because that would mean that I would have to acknowledge my own. I've spent my entire life hiding from my fear. I hide from my fear because I am ashamed of it. I don't have all the anxiety this year. I just focus on accepting him for who he is. He is a wonderful person. He doesn't need to be fixed. Sure, there are things that we can do to help him get better at baseball, but those are just skills that he can learn. They're not defects that he needs to hide. That's how I felt growing up and it's taken me 30+ years to recognize that I'm not defective. He doesn't need to grow up with the same baggage.

A failure to appropriately express my affections has been a big problem in my marriage. Expressing feelings means being vulnerable. That was a scary thought for me (even in the context of a relationship where it has been made very clear that my love and affection is shared and appreciated). Last night would have turned this morning into an emotionally painful time a year or so ago. I would have missed some very clear signs and left my wife feeling hurt and unappreciated. I was experiencing the feelings that used to make me disengage, but I recognized them for what they were and focused on what my wife was telling me. She wasn't saying anything with words, but with her actions. That's a mode of communication that is just as relevant to her as words, but has given me all kinds of problems over the years. Actions are open to all kinds of interpretations. While one part of me was reading the situation in the intended fashion, another part of me was too busy thinking of ways that things might go wrong and would do all that it could to prevent those possibilities from becoming a reality. I was able to get beyond that limit last night. Nothing I feared was true and the night was fantastic. 

The limitations I've put on myself with fear is not restricted to my relationships with others. I was running yesterday. This was my weekly long run, but I wasn't sure that I was up to the distance that I had planned. I was feeling a little thirsty and a bit out of sorts. I recognized it as fear, fear of the pain, fear of boredom, and just kept going. I put the fear out of my mind and stopped fighting. I fight to keep the fear at bay rather than just letting the less than pleasant sensations have their moment and move beyond them. Feeling afraid, inadequate, hungry, thirsty, embarrassed, or ashamed will be a little unpleasant, but it will pass. Having those feelings doesn't make me weak or less of a man or an inferior person. Those feelings just make me human. Fighting against them won't prove anything. Not every accomplishment needs to be a monumental struggle. Sometimes surrendering to the moment, feeling the pain, feeling bad, is the best way to move forward. Those bad moments don't define you. It's ok to feel bad. That doesn't make you bad or weak or a waste. 

Monday, April 13, 2015

Anti-me

I spend way too much time thinking about what I do, why I do it, and how I can get better at whatever it is that's on my mind at the moment. That's the legacy of this blog (if the web allows hyper-specialization in one arcane topic, I've specialized on myself). I once feared that this suggested some kind of narcissistic character, but the simple fact that I was concerned about being so self-involved shows that I'm not a narcissist. No, my concern with what I have going on professionally, academically, or in some kind of activity where I can be judged against some standard is rooted in my combat against the anti-me.

Oh yes, my nemesis the anti-me. The anti-me is all those things that I don't have, everything that I'm not. The anti-me is the antithesis of all of my short-comings and failures. It's a highly sophisticated construct that has been hounding me for my entire life. It's what I feared people would see that I'm missing if I opened up. It's all the things that I thought I should have but I lacked. It's the superior me, the self that I thought I should be. It's what I'm not rather than what I am.

I've never lived up to the ideals of the anti-me. Of course it's impossible to meet those expectations. No matter what I achieve, there's always something greater that could have been done. The satisfaction of accomplishment is always tinged with a note of the possibility of something more impressive. The anti-me was the handsome, acne-free version of myself. The anti-me was more aggressive on the football field, a better student, not so socially awkward. People loved the anti-me because he didn't have all the awkward undesirability that was such a central part of who I was for so much of my youth.

He's stalked me as an adult. His influence was just a bit more stealthy and insidious. He's the voice that keeps me from fully recognizing and appreciating all the great things in my life. He's all the doubt that keeps me from fully expressing myself, from being open and vulnerable. I may have projected some of the sentiments that I felt flowing from him onto other people in my life. How can anybody see me as capable of being a certain kind of husband, a certain kind of parent, a certain kind of friend if I'm lacking in all kinds of important traits.

All my crazy schemes, law school, the pursuit of new jobs, all my talk of The Alpha, even my fixation on The Edge, are my efforts to negate the impact of the anti-me. If the anti-me makes me feel undesirable, being found worthy of acceptance into a law school class or competent to fill some random industry role must mean that I have some desirable qualities. Even my reluctance to be open with my needs and desires in my most intimate relationships comes down to a fear of having my deficiencies confirmed. It's only safe to express those needs once it's been made clear that they will be accepted in a positive fashion.

So all of my focus on myself is really a focus on what I need to do to prove that I'm not as deficient and undesirable as my anti-me makes me feel. That negative voice, always emphasizing what I'm not, how I'm imperfect and a failure, has had a larger role in how I perceive myself than I've every fully appreciated. What I'm not has always claimed a greater share that what I am and what I have. I have started to see where the anti-me comes from. It's not a natural part of who I am. It's a response to stuff that was going on in my life, and the lives of the people around me. It's propelled me forward, but it's also held me back. It's presence is a sign of the most dysfunctional relationship in my life, the relationship that I have with myself.

It's time to quiet the anti-me.