Tuesday, September 21, 2010

To Blog or Not to Blog

One of my dear readers was kind enough to suggest, in a comment she left me, that I should feel free to leave the blogging world for a time, in order to process what I need to process these days.  I have been thinking about that, somewhat tempted by that thought.  But the temptation was fleeting.  Here's why.

I have struggled for a long time with authenticity.  I am a master of putting on a face of strength and confidence and whatever else it is that people sometimes say that they see in me.  As I have mentioned before on this blog, the environment in which I grew up rewarded strength, strong opinions, education, maintaining appearances, and objectivity.  All of these things, while perhaps worthy goals for many, and while useful at times in going about day-to-day life, have not always served me well.  It's hard for me to express emotion, particularly in the moment, and it's hard putting bits of my inner self out there for public display.  It's both habit and fear of rejection, I suppose.  It continues to be a learning process for me to be ok with myself as I really am, and to allow that inner person to claw its way out where she is visible to the world.  I can tell these days that I've made progress over the last few years:  I blog about these issues and my struggles now; in recent weeks, I've cried on the shoulders of friends; I can talk about how much it hurts to have lost the children of our first referral; I can accept support more easily.

My blog has been significant for me in my quest for authenticity.  Though many of my posts are light in content, it's become much more than that for me; it's afforded me the opportunity, at times, to dig a little deeper into myself, and then risk vulnerability with others by sharing with you what I'm thinking.

When the spoken word fails me, when the masks of a lifetime take control of my face, the written word is a conduit through which I can express the stuff that's really going on inside.  Thus, for me, working through the grief of our recent loss can be done, in part, through this medium.  When I write some of my thoughts down, it teases out of me the emotions that I would otherwise be tempted to bury pretty deeply; it prods me to be honest about my need of people, which again I would otherwise deny in my quest to be seen as self sufficient and strong; and it gives me the opportunity to test out on others whether I am worthy of friendship and acceptance, rather than rejection.  The person inside of me, I've been discovering in very recent years, is a person of strength and certainty...just, perhaps, in different ways than I've often projected myself to be.

So...I'm going to keep working on my blog.  Maybe a little less frequently than in the past, but with a desire to talk about, and work through, some of the stuff that's hard for me to talk about...most recently, things such as grief and guilt.

3 comments:

  1. I relate so much to this. I struggled yesterday with whether or not to write and I realized being honest about how I was doing was part of my blog and experience and it doesn't serve anyone to pretend this doesn't hurt.

    I have so much admiration for your strength and honesty.

    Jxx

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  2. I for one, love your honesty. I think that being as transparent as you can not only helps you to process things and heal, but also helps others who may have to walk similar roads and lets them feel normal, to know that it's okay to FEEL.

    I grew up in a home where appearances were all that mattered. I know how hard it is to drop that and try to live authentically. Keep doing what you're doing!

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  3. I'm glad. :)

    I was also brought up to be strong and, when weak, to maintain the illusion of strength. This post hits home for me because I've been thinking, lately, that I have nearly totally pulled back emotionally on my blog over the last two or three years. I got TOO real on there a few years ago, suffered the backlash, and now have the once-bitten mentality. But I've been thinking it's time to venture out there again and be more transparent and vulnerable. That's a tall order when British blood is flowing through my veins :) but there's no point in blogging if I'm just putting a happy front on my life. Thanks for the unintentional encouragement to open up a little bit more.

    I'm glad you decided to blog through it. You're still in my prayers and thoughts, and so are all your children -- Matthew, your two lost little ones, and the two little ones that have yet to be referred.

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