Sunday, January 15, 2012

Perception.

See, I like to think I'm an amazing badass who can do anything if I just apply hard work, elbow grease, and the American way.

I'm not sure if you've noticed from reading my blog, but that is not always the case. There are a lot of situations I would require enough elbow grease to fill a swimming pool to get through, and a lot of times the American way ain't gonna accomplish shit. I simply cannot just push myself through a lot of things, and this makes me feel guilty.

I can't speak for you, obviously, but I am intimately familiar with guilt. I feel very guilty about my inability to do certain things. This only gets worse when someone asks me why I can't do whatever it is. My answers tend to be along the lines of "I don't know" or "I can't explain right now" or just "I'm sorry." I understand that these are terrible answers and they don't help you!

Here's the thing: they don't help me either. I think there are very few people who find it helpful to be pressed about their feelings while they are in the middle of a breakdown. Therapy is, of course, very helpful for a lot of people! But therapy is different from your mom telling you, "I don't understand why you're making such a big deal out of this," or whatever it is your mom tells you.

I think a lot of people don't understand themselves why a certain thing triggers them so much. I know I don't. And being pressed to explain something I don't understand, while crying, and often while ruining some kind of plan, just serves to make me feel incredibly guilty.

Guilt sucks. So does feeling worthless or pathetic for not being able to force yourself through things. I don't know how to deal with guilt yet, but I promise I'll be back to tell you if I ever do discover a way.

In the meantime, I do have a method for feeling less pathetic about my weaknesses. Remember how I like thinking about what a complete and total badass I am? I can still be a badass. Watch:

If something in a class is upsetting me, I get up and walk the fuck out because I don't need no bells to tell me where to be. Rules don't apply to me.

If I don't want to talk to someone, I tell them, "Listen up, I'm not in the mood for chitchat." My feelings are more important than theirs.

If I can't bring myself to go out with people, I ring 'em up and say, "Sorry your party's gonna be shit without me," and then hang up.

Try to change the way you think about things! Turning someone down doesn't have to mean you're a shitty person who sucks and is letting them down forever and they'll hate you now. Sometimes it means you have too much badass inside you and it just dribbles out until you're sitting on the couch in a pile of bipches and hoes.

Now, I don't know how common it actually is to have the same feeling as I do, that I am a fuckin' badass biker babe trapped in the body of a shygirl. Maybe you don't hold yourself to the same standards or wish to ollie out of depression on your sick skateboard. But I know that, whatever you are like, there is a way for you to look at your situation differently.

hearts, shygirl

Monday, January 2, 2012

How to help people.

I don't know.

Sorry if I got your hopes up by writing that as my title, as if I am a master at understanding how to help. The real problem is that I don't think there exist any masters at this tender subject. It's very hard to help people. Everyone is different, after all. There is no one single way to help.

For example, I like when people post pictures of themselves holding up inspirational quotes on slips of paper and smiling. That makes me happy. But at the same time, I know there are a lot of people who think that's a stupid hipster thing to do. So it's hard to get your message out to everyone if you're doing it on cute pieces of paper.

The best method I can think of right now is talking openly, and that's not going to work for everyone either. People have a lot of trouble speaking openly, especially shy people -- the very ones I am trying to reach. Even if you read a blog post or essay or book by someone who is trying their best to speak to you from their heart, even if they say "please talk to me, I want to help you and everyone like you," it might still feel next-to-impossible to reach back out to them.

How do you open up conversation with someone whose entire problem is their inability to have conversations? I don't know. I think what needs to happen first is that you need to be able to wear your heart on your sleeve and convince people that you are speaking entirely truthfully. Everyone, not just shygirls, has trouble believing that other people want to help them 100%. We are all a little bit skeptical.

But I do want to help with my entire heart. I want everyone to feel strong and loved and beautiful. I want everyone to believe in the goodness of people like I do.

I also want to say that while I don't know everything, I want to help. I think that everyone can help, too. Even if someone has an issue you aren't very sure about, saying to them, "I don't understand how you feel about this, but I am willing to listen while you explain it to me," seems like the best thing to me. There are also issues that you may never understand. I have heard that I, as a white girl, will never be able to truly understand how it feels to be a person of color.

And that's okay. I also think there are people who will never truly understand what it is like to be shy or depressed.

That's not meant to be a barrier between any of us. It's meant to be a bridge. We will never understand everyone about each other, but we can use our own experiences to help us with other people's experiences.

love, shygirl