driving home from work yesterday, i realized something.
i've mistaken the lyrics to my favorite song. for six years now.
and it's not a huge difference. just a pronoun.
but it filled me with a profound sadness and slight case of mistaken identity. who am i if not the girl who knows every word to passing afternoon? who turns it on when the clouds hang low in the sky and the highway is gloomy with the sad stares of people going home?
suddenly, even the melodic hum of the radio and the spin of the tires beneath my wheels wasn't enough to comfort me, and i rode the rest of the way in silence.
for silence never betrays.
Showing posts with label realization. Show all posts
Showing posts with label realization. Show all posts
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Thursday, May 5, 2011
the one without a picture
i thought long and hard about a picture for this post. but what would a picture of stuttering look like? colin firth?
so there is no picture today. but on we shall march.
i had a little presentation to give on tuesday.
it lasted only two minutes, but the amount of stress, anguish and embarrassment it created was enough to wreck me for a day. even sitting outside during lunch at the picnic tables, chicken wrap in hand and a warm breeze at my ankles, i couldn't shake it.
because i did so utterly, completely horrible. enough for my boss to ask what happened. enough for the silence of a million crickets to fill the room. enough for tears to well up and my face to flush. immediately after, i wanted to run to the ladies room, sit in the first stall and just cry. because as much as i love myself, as confident as i am in my ability to write, communicate and interact, my fault is being human. being crackable and breakable. fragile, i suppose.
but i did something tuesday that i am immeasurably proud of. i didn't run. i didn't even look down, against all my instinct and intuition. i held the tears locked in position, and willed them, with a force not entirely my own, but more of God, to not fall down my cheeks. and they didn't. they stayed in little half-pools until they faded back to where they came from.
and it may seem small. i suppose, after all, it is small. but it is a victory, nonetheless.
i may never be free of my stutter. for all the therapy, special hearing aids, and reading practice, there will inevitably always be that room full of intimidating people who, with one look, can undo me.
but if i can pull myself together, as i did on tuesday, i know i'll be just fine. because yes, no one can make me feel inferior without my consent. but in that conference room, surrounded by a sea of corporate chaos, i realized something.
no one includes me.
so there is no picture today. but on we shall march.
i had a little presentation to give on tuesday.
it lasted only two minutes, but the amount of stress, anguish and embarrassment it created was enough to wreck me for a day. even sitting outside during lunch at the picnic tables, chicken wrap in hand and a warm breeze at my ankles, i couldn't shake it.
because i did so utterly, completely horrible. enough for my boss to ask what happened. enough for the silence of a million crickets to fill the room. enough for tears to well up and my face to flush. immediately after, i wanted to run to the ladies room, sit in the first stall and just cry. because as much as i love myself, as confident as i am in my ability to write, communicate and interact, my fault is being human. being crackable and breakable. fragile, i suppose.
but i did something tuesday that i am immeasurably proud of. i didn't run. i didn't even look down, against all my instinct and intuition. i held the tears locked in position, and willed them, with a force not entirely my own, but more of God, to not fall down my cheeks. and they didn't. they stayed in little half-pools until they faded back to where they came from.
and it may seem small. i suppose, after all, it is small. but it is a victory, nonetheless.
i may never be free of my stutter. for all the therapy, special hearing aids, and reading practice, there will inevitably always be that room full of intimidating people who, with one look, can undo me.
but if i can pull myself together, as i did on tuesday, i know i'll be just fine. because yes, no one can make me feel inferior without my consent. but in that conference room, surrounded by a sea of corporate chaos, i realized something.
no one includes me.
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