I suppose you could say I'm kind of writing to write. Sort of stream-of-conscience. But not really.
Through most of my life, a tender touch always made me cry. Always, without question and often to the point of shoving the tenderness away, until my later years. I suppose I calloused myself to it, though I still hold a weakness for certain touches (the face, particularly).
I've always maintained my favorite English word is "whisper."
Today I sit and listen to Rain by Patti Griffith.
Rain is a silent, private tenderness. Delicate. I've never done "delicate" very well. A tough girl. A tomboy. Dresses make me feel like an alien (except during my promiscuous period, during which time the higher the heels and the tighter & shorter the dress/skirt, the better). Still even then I was seeking that tenderness that I almost always rejected. Strange oxymoron, I know.
Whisper....whisper is soft, like the breeze...I always envision it riding on the wind, sailing across the world, over oceans. Whispers of wishes and dreams and broken hearts.
Tears....tender.
So hard to cry...can't stand that tender part of me, that cries from some place of deep wounds and darkness. I can cry angry tears because anger is not tender, but tender tears are.
Tenderness is so hard to take...to accept. To be understood and validated hurts more than anything else because it's so foreign. To be accepted hurts because it's not believable.
To trust......all the years I've spent thinking I was trusting when, in truth, I've never trusted anyone completely. There are still secrets, dark ones where I can't let tenderness invade. Places of my own torment that - ironically, out of tenderness - I don't want others to see or experience.
Tears, rain, whispers, winds. Things that fade, but hurt so much because they touch something I avoid and always have.
That's why tenderness hurts.
Showing posts with label ashamed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ashamed. Show all posts
Thursday, February 19, 2015
Tenderness
Labels:
abuse,
ache,
afraid,
anger,
anxiety,
ashamed,
away,
child,
D.I.D.,
feelings,
past,
PTSD,
punishment,
push,
tenderness
Monday, November 19, 2012
Tired
Shame, shame, shame.
It permeates me. The past few days have been those kinds of days where I just wished I didn't exist.
I'm tired.
I'm lost.
I am ashamed.
It's very difficult to accept "I love you" from anyone, when there's not one single redeeming quality you can see about yourself.
My last session was beyond humiliating. So much so, that I almost didn't go today, which Michelle noticed.
"I'm glad you came today," she said, knowing a million parts of me were pulling me away, telling me to run.
Sue William Silverman wrote a number of books and is also a friend of mine on facebook. She's a very brave woman - she put things in her memoir about being molested and abused by her affluent father, and followed it with a sequel about sexual addiction and finally "Fearless Confessions" - a book about how to write about these things. Quite the appropriate title, I think.
How horrible it is, to tell. How frightening. Not just the details and grit, but what's going on inside you. The reality of your every-day breaths. Every thought that stabs you with how indecent you are, unworthy you are, useless you are. It's all this fucking game you play, to make everyone happy...to make everyone love you...even if you don't believe they do, you can at least see what it's like.
I believe Bill... but that's a double-edged sword.
I believe that he loves me, but I don't feel I deserve it. That hurts. I want it, but I am so afraid of it.
Life just sucks these past few days.
I am tired.
It permeates me. The past few days have been those kinds of days where I just wished I didn't exist.
I'm tired.
I'm lost.
I am ashamed.
It's very difficult to accept "I love you" from anyone, when there's not one single redeeming quality you can see about yourself.
My last session was beyond humiliating. So much so, that I almost didn't go today, which Michelle noticed.
"I'm glad you came today," she said, knowing a million parts of me were pulling me away, telling me to run.
Sue William Silverman wrote a number of books and is also a friend of mine on facebook. She's a very brave woman - she put things in her memoir about being molested and abused by her affluent father, and followed it with a sequel about sexual addiction and finally "Fearless Confessions" - a book about how to write about these things. Quite the appropriate title, I think.
How horrible it is, to tell. How frightening. Not just the details and grit, but what's going on inside you. The reality of your every-day breaths. Every thought that stabs you with how indecent you are, unworthy you are, useless you are. It's all this fucking game you play, to make everyone happy...to make everyone love you...even if you don't believe they do, you can at least see what it's like.
I believe Bill... but that's a double-edged sword.
I believe that he loves me, but I don't feel I deserve it. That hurts. I want it, but I am so afraid of it.
Life just sucks these past few days.
I am tired.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)