Category Archives: Brokenness

The Hermit

Jethro was alone, as he always had been. He liked it better that way. Not had much in the way of validation in recent years, but he had no one left to impress. Life for him was simple. No one to rely on, and no one who relied on him. 

His wife had passed away long ago, but he couldn’t remember how long it had been. The days, months, and years had started to blur together. That was the cost of his self-isolation, but he didn’t mind. Not really. It had been so long since he had seen another person, he wondered if anyone knew that he was still alive. It didn’t much bother him. 

He had felt like a burden in his younger years. Try as he may he had never really shaken that feeling. It had been tough to cope with at first, but over time he had started to care less and less. However, the less he valued outside opinion, the harsher he was on himself.

The sense of dissatisfaction never left him. And eventually it leaked out into his professional life. Finding work had always been a struggle. He just couldn’t get himself to stick with something for long-term. It had always felt monotonous and restricting so he had tried his hand at many things. Becoming proficient at everything, but excelling at nothing. 

His wife had stuck with him through it all. Jethro had never really understood why. But that had been a different time. One that was long past. The years then had been brighter, but he wouldn’t have called them happy. 

After several decades, he still hadn’t found what he’d been looking for. Satisfaction had always been ever so elusive. He had come close several times but had never found it. It wasn’t asking for too much was it? Jethro hadn’t thought so, but the Universe didn’t seem to agree.

Thirty years of soul-searching, and he’d had nothing to show for it. So he had given up. Withdrawing within himself, he had closed himself off to the world. It wasn’t worth it to him anymore. He had given to the world what he could, and had received nothing in return.

Jethro had never really had a problem speaking with others, in fact he considered himself socially adept. But he had never liked people, and for most of his existence that dictated much of his social interaction. Over the years, he’d become more and more of a recluse. Life was easier that way, when there was no one left to disappoint.

The years leading up to his wife’s passing had not been great. They hadn’t fought much, but they also hadn’t spent much meaningful time together. Jethro had withdrawn too far, grown too aloof. Looking back on it, he wished that he would’ve approached things differently, but he had changed. He didn’t think it was for the better. But no use mourning for what was already lost. He had already moved on. 

After she had died, he had packed up his belongings and had left home. He had gone off the grid, leaving most of his possessions behind—he no longer had use for them—only bringing whatever fit into his truck. He had no need for his past life. 

He had driven as far as he could go, stopping when he could no longer hear the sound of civilization. There were no roads where he was, no buildings, no excavated land. He’d found his own patch of dirt, untouched by humanity. Unmarred, unblemished, unsoiled. That was exactly where he wanted to be.

Everything that Jethro had he built on his own. He didn’t know where he was, but he didn’t care. This cabin was his home. The garden around it was his own. This was his land and he’d be damned if anyone took it away from him. He had everything that he needed. No stress. No distractions. No obligations. But most importantly, no guilt. Free to focus on himself. 

So, that fateful day in August was a day like any other. Jethro woke up an hour before sunrise as he often did. Out of habit, he put on his platinum watch, tapping a finger to the glass twice. It hadn’t ticked in more than a decade, but he had never bothered to fix it. It was a keepsake of a past life and nothing more. He didn’t need it to tell time. His internal clock hadn’t failed him yet.

It was when he was in the middle of his rounds that everything changed. He had finished checking his traps and was on his way to collect water from the nearby stream  when chaos ensued. It started out as a rattling of dirt and pebbles. Odd. Jethro didn’t think he was in earthquake territory. 

But it wasn’t an earthquake. It was something much worse. Out of the corner of his eye, Jethro saw a red ball streaking through the air. Heat radiated from it as it fell towards the ground. Jethro shielded his eyes—it grew brighter as it drew near. 

Oh shit. He braced himself for the impact, but it swept him off his feet anyway. Ripples of air pulsed towards him, keeping him flat on his back. After about thirty seconds, there was a deafening boom followed by several thunderous cracks

Jethro lay still, his ears ringing. That was when the screaming started. Not as far away from humanity as he had thought. Paradise shattered. Should I help? he wondered. Are there people to save? He was no hero, but could he leave people in distress? Would he feel guilty for his inaction?

Despite his better judgment he decided that he needed to investigate. He didn’t want to go, but he felt that he had to. Jethro quickly loaded supplies into the bed of his truck—some food, a few blankets, a shovel, a knife, his trusty hunting rifle, a handgun. 

Once he was ready, he turned the key in the ignition, praying that his truck would start. It had been many years since he had driven it. At first, he was met with only a bunch of clicking—hopefully the battery hadn’t rusted over. Just my luck. The one time I need it to work

Jethro got out of the cab, and opened the hood. Everything looked to be in order. After giving the dashboard a few hearty smacks, he tried again. The engine sputtered then came to life. 

Figuring out which way to go was fairly straightforward. Towards the screaming seemed like a good bet. The trail of destruction wasn’t hard to follow. He drove past toppled trees and over rocky terrain. Thank God for allwheel drive.

Before long, he reached the epicenter in a clearing devoid of trees. An odd sight considering the path of splintered forest he had followed to get there. Even odder was the fact that the screaming had stopped. It was only a few miles away from his cabin. He hadn’t needed to take a highway to get there, it was in unchartered land as he was. 

But what he saw wasn’t what he had expected to see. There was no ring of fire, no crater of impact. Instead what he saw before him was a glowing yellow ball. It looked like a miniature sun but it gave off less heat than it had before. 

Jethro got out of his truck slowly. No sudden movements. Without turning his back to the ball, he eased his way to the bed. He holstered his handgun, then pulled out his rifle as quietly as possible. 

He waited thirty seconds, a minute, two minutes. There was no movement, and no sound. Cautiously, Jethro crept towards the ball, finger resting on the trigger. As he drew to within twenty yards the ball started to rotate and hum. Jethro stopped walking, and crouched down. Aiming down the sights, he prepared for what was to come.

The humming grew to a whine as the ball spun faster and faster. It strobed from yellow to orange to red. Jethro looked down but not away, wishing that he had remembered to bring sunglasses. 

After some time, the spinning orb began to slow. A circular door opened on the side, and glaring white light emanated from within. Jethro looked away, but not quick enough as spots were seared into his retinas. Surprisingly, he felt no pain.

A figure emerged, cloaked in darkness. Jethro couldn’t make out a face or any distinct features. It was like staring into a void. There was a light coming from behind the figure, but it was unclear where it came from.

The figure came towards him, stopping ten feet away. Looking upon it filled Jethro with a sense of dread and foreboding. Is this my last hour? He continued to aim down the sight of the barrel, but he was trembling so much that he didn’t know if he’d be able to take the shot.

The shadow-man lifted a hand. Jethro dropped his rifle as it became unbearably hot. He watched as it melted into slag, burning a hole in the ground. Jethro lowered himself to both knees, bowing his head. His end was near.

“Gift me the Earth,” the figure said.

“I-I-Its n-n-not mine to give,” Jethro stammered. His voice was raspy and gritty from years of disuse.

“GIFT ME THE EARTH,” the shadow-man said more forcefully.

“I cannot give what is not mine.”

“This planet has met its doom. You are the last one left. Its sole inhabitant.”

“Even still, I cannot give it to you.” If he had nothing else, Jethro still had his principles.

“Then the world will burn.”

“Do what you will. Take what you want. I will not stop you,” Jethro said.

“A planet must be gifted. It cannot be taken. Gift. Me. The. Earth.”

“I cannot.”

“Then we shall become one,” the shadow-man said, stepping closer to Jethro.

There was nothing left for Jethro to do or say, so he looked up at the shadow-man, accepting his fate.

“On your feet,” the figure commanded.

Jethro rose.

The figure laid a hand on Jethro’s forehead, so hot that it seared flesh. Jethro screamed. The burning continued for what felt like hours. Abruptly the sensation stopped, and with it came knowledge. Jethro knew what he’d been missing. Fire and flame was all that he needed. All the worlds would burn, for they needed cleansing.

Mind-Numbing Complexity

English is a funny language. Not all synonyms are entirely interchangeable—they’re not all created equal. Some similar words have different connotations. The meaning of a word might change depending on context. Other words create implications via subtext. There is quite a lot of nuance involved when it comes to wordplay. That’s why I love it so much. A complex language for a complex person. 

Being complex, isn’t always a bad thing, however. Oftentimes, complexity is conflated with high maintenance. Not the same thing, although they might overlap. You can be complex in your personality, but simplistic in your goal setting. You might be easy to please but have varied interests that don’t seem to fit together. But that’s just it. Each person is a unique puzzle with differing pieces. There may be some similarities, but no two people are identical. Most people are complex in some areas, but simplistic in others. Not often will you find someone who is completely one or the other. As with most things, making it black and white oversimplifies things. Personally, I don’t like being told things in absolutes. Doing so makes it easy to think in terms of us vs them. I’ve taken enough sociology classes to know that that’s a dangerous place to be in.

When you think in terms of us vs them you have a tendency to make “them” the Other. There’s an in-group and an out-group. Good vs evil. Heroes vs villains. Again, that’s not how life works. Almost everyone thinks that what they’re doing is right. Everyone will find a way to justify their behavior, even if they know what they’re doing is “wrong.” What really defines right or wrong anyway? Everyone’s moral compass is different. So, what purpose does this really serve? You’ve created a sense of belonging at the expense of alienating others. In this system of constant in and out, there are outcasts everywhere we look. Are we not all humans? Should we not all strive for the same goal—making the world a better place?

Being an outcast is nothing new to me. I never really seemed to fit in anywhere. I’ve felt that way my whole life. Some things were within my control, some things were not. For a while it pained me, I was in a constant struggle between trying to find acceptance and trying to maintain my individuality. At times, I tried so hard to conform, not realizing that conformity isn’t in my DNA. It’s something I can keep trying to do, but now I know that it will never make me happy. Unfortunately, it took me quite a while to finally understand that. I maintained the war inside my mind, not knowing that I didn’t have to. I was free to be me in all my glory, if only I would let myself. But as I’ve said before, fear held me back. It prevented me from embracing every aspect. It forced me to suppress certain interests and qualities just so I would have a cleaner image. This cleaner image wasn’t real though, it was just a facade—not a very good one. It only served as a hindrance on my road to self-discovery.

Worse than lying to others, I was lying to myself. I was trying to convince myself that I was something that I was not. Trying to mold myself into a shape that fit neatly inside a cookie cutter, paring off parts of me that made me who I was. However, clean-cut was never meant for me. Conformity wasn’t the solution. Fitting inside a cookie cutter was not what I was called to do. I have varied interests and hobbies, it’s always been that way. I’m passionate about fantasy and sci-fi, but I’m also passionate about watching football. I appreciate literary art, but I also appreciate seeing people beat the shit out of each other in MMA. I love building Lego sets, but I also love killing things in RPGs. I like what I like, and that makes me who I am. I have gentler interests and I have more violent ones—they can co-exist. Without that duality, I am not the same person. If only I had been more accepting of that as a teenager. 

In High School, I hovered between the nerd crowd, the potheads, and the loners, not connecting entirely with any of them. It turns out I am in fact all three, but I never would’ve known it. I focused way too much of my energy on trying to suppress certain parts of myself that I didn’t want others to see, instead of loving me for me. I tried to hide who I was instead of trying to understand who I was. In trying to remove the parts of me that I didn’t like, I unintentionally actuated a cycle of self-loathing. Attempting to sheer off slivers of the cornerstone of my personality only led to inevitable disappointment, which caused me to spiral deeper into self-contempt. In all honesty, that’s probably why I suffered for so long. If you don’t love yourself, it shows through in the way you talk and the way you act. It’s not as well-concealed as you think it is.

Of course, it’s hard to see that when you lack self-awareness. It’s hard to do anything really if you have an unrealistic outlook on life. Unfortunately, that was me for a long time. My constant wallowing and self-pity blinded me to what was going on around me. I was incredibly self-absorbed but also incapable of improving my situation because I was stubborn and didn’t have a coping mechanism in place for dealing with adversity. If your primary instinct is to run or to hide from hardship, you’re in for a lifetime of pain. Emotional trauma that isn’t dealt with head-on isn’t going to heal on its own. Each new bit of pain that you repress is only going to make things worse. It’s easy to ignore your trauma or to suppress it, but it’s only a temporary fix, no better than a band-aid.

I learned that the hard way. For twenty-seven years I pushed the pain and adversity deep into the recesses of my mind. Each negative experience was tucked away, never to be thought about or dealt with, it hurt too much, but I was only delaying the inevitable—a nervous breakdown was imminent. Aside from failure, emotional pain was what scared me the most. This fear proved to be crippling, preventing me from moving forward with my life. I didn’t know it, but I was stuck dwelling on the past. Until I drilled down to the root, until I dealt with the things I was ignoring, I would not find healing and circumstances would not improve. I was stuck in a holding pattern, wanting better but seeking to achieve it in all the wrong ways. I naively thought I could set myself up for a bright future without addressing the past. Life doesn’t work that way. That will become clear to you in short order.

After a tough breakup my junior year of college, things began to spiral. All the issues that I had tried to ignore the previous seven years had stacked and were coming to a head. But instead of addressing them directly, I returned to the well-oiled machine of running, hiding, and ignoring. This time, however, I added a fourth item to the mix: numbness. I tried to numb my emotions with anything I could find: cigarettes, weed, alcohol. This was the physical anesthesia, but it was accompanied by psychological anesthesia as well. I dampened my expectations—bad times were bound to happen to me, and the good times wouldn’t last. The walls that were starting to come down during college, I built back up, higher than ever. I had a few friends that I leaned on for my support system, but I’d be damned if I let anyone new through—not before I’d had a chance to vet them first. I was living a hedonistic lifestyle without the hedonism, because pleasure no longer existed to me. Thus began my cycle of despair. Thus began my descent into nihilism.

Surprisingly, my attempt at numbness worked, and it was more effective than I had anticipated. So much so that for five and a half years I forgot what it felt like to be human. Each day was the same as the last. Stuck at a dead end job. Living a dead end life. I wasn’t happy, but I also wasn’t angry. I was in a perpetual state of melancholy. Low energy and unfeeling. A robot going through the motions, running through a preset program. Go to work, come home, get heavily medicated, go to sleep, eat only if I feel like it. The one thing I found solace in was that despite my aversion to emotional pain, I was still capable of feeling physical pain. I didn’t self-harm, but that was only because I’d found someone else to do it for me.

I’d known since Junior High that I was going to get tattoos later in life. It just took me a while before I finally got my first one. But once I did, it was an addiction that I had no intention of controlling. And it was probably better that way. Without this outlet, I probably would’ve been even worse off. For that half decade, tattoos were the only thing that kept me sane. The only thing that made my life feel real. The only thing that I could actually feel. Sure I got high every day, and sure socializing gave me a bit of a rush, but nothing beat the burst of adrenaline I got from a tattoo session. The physical pain of a needle reminded me that I was still capable of feeling. It reminded me that I was still human despite the nothingness that my life had become.

Numbing myself had seemed harmless at the time, but so too did running and hiding and ignoring. That’s how it all starts though isn’t it? The path to self-destruction doesn’t start out at that magnitude. You let the little things slide and they start to add up. Before you know it, several minor issues have become a monstrous one. That’s when life becomes overwhelming. That’s when you feel like you’ve lost control. That’s when the gears start spinning, but the wheels stop turning. Unfortunately, my story is not unique. Many young adults have been through the same shit. Ideally, you want to tackle your issues one by one, nip them in the bud before they have a chance to snowball. But oftentimes we don’t have all the tools we need to fix our problems and we don’t have the awareness to know when things need changing. Even if we do, we might not know what to pivot to or how to pivot when we find that things aren’t working.

But not all hope is lost. You’ve reached a dark day, but there is always a way out. It might appear to you in the form of a permanent, long-term catchall solution that brings about an end to your suffering. More likely, however, you will come across a temporary fix or several. There’s nothing wrong with that. Broken people need to find healing some way, some how. What matters is not how quickly you are able to heal, but rather how thoroughly. It might take you several tries to find the path of healing, but that’s okay. Once you acknowledge that things could be better, you’ve taken the first step.

Still, words mean little if there is no action to follow. It didn’t take me long to realize that living wasn’t fun for me anymore. I knew that as early as 2006, but I chalked it up to teenage angst. I believed that in time, my depression would go away on its own. How innocent. How naive. How misguided. It wasn’t until 2015 that I decided that I wanted more from life. I wanted to find meaning, to do something fulfilling, to be happy for the first time in a long time. Once again, there wasn’t any meaningful action to follow. I was too afraid, too nervous, gave up too easily. 

And yet, unbeknownst to me I had stumbled onto the right path. Everything happens for a reason. My adversity made me stronger. Everything I went through made me into the man I am today. The devil tried to bring me down, but he only made me better. The numbness hindered me more than it helped me, but it was necessary. Without it, I wouldn’t have gained a deeper appreciation for the little things in life. I wouldn’t have learned to cherish my emotions. I wouldn’t have learned how to feel again if I hadn’t forgotten how to in the first place.

The tattoos weren’t a landmark on my path to healing, but they led me to it. The physical pain couldn’t replicate my psychological pain, but it helped me to feel something. There aren’t many stories or meanings behind my ink, but they mean something to me. The physical scars masked my psychological ones. They didn’t bring meaning to my life, they didn’t make me feel better about myself, they didn’t buy me happiness. But what they did do was remind me of my humanity. Remind me that I’m not a program. Remind me that I am in control. My tattoos tell the story of a broken kid. Someone who had lost his way. Someone who had lost all hope. My tattoos didn’t change who I was, but they helped me to find what I was looking for. The numbness slowed the damage, but it wasn’t able to heal. The pain showed me that, at the very least I was real. And in that moment it was enough. 

Where Darkness Lies

On the road again
On a journey to the unknown
We started out with high hopes
But didn’t know where we would go
We thought we would trailblaze, but didn’t know how
We were unprepared for what was to come, nothing for it now
Went forth with the understanding: learn along the way
We failed to realize that it only made us easy prey
On the road again
Going where darkness lies
On the road again
With no end point in mind
We went forth with high hopes
Thinking us pioneers
Thinking us wise
Thinking we knew better than nature
But in truth, we were blind
We went forth thinking we were prepared
for what life threw at us
We thought we could influence the scenery around us
We thought… We thought… We thought…
But it was not enough
Wherever we may roam, darkness soon follows
A blight on the land, a pox on every man
The path ahead is where darkness lies
The path ahead is full of sorrow
The path ahead, the path ahead
Full of misery, full of pain
Our good intentions were just that
We thought we’d make a difference
We thought we’d do better
We thought we knew what was best
But we knew nothing
Just another colonist thinking we knew what was right
Just another colonist fucking up daily life
On the road to misery, we didn’t know we were headed
Spreading famine and misfortune, death’s angel
Territorial and possessive, claiming that which isn’t ours
Onward we may roam, but darkness is bound to follow
Where we go is where darkness lies
The burden of man is draining on the land
Each man is responsible, would be better off dead
On the road again to where darkness lies
On the path of darkness is where all hope dies

Fear Itself

FDR once said that, “the only thing we have to fear is fear itself.” A statement from ninety years ago, but a true one if ever there was one. Some may see it as a reason not to put stock in such quotes, but I’m not one of them. A thing of the past isn’t merely a thing of the past. There are lessons to be learned, knowledge that can be gained, advice that can be heeded. Unfortunately, in this era of heightened media illiteracy rife with fake news, “Tiktok Doctors”, and lack of fact-checking, there is a tendency to whitewash the past. 

History is history. We have no cause to question it. Yes, oftentimes accounts are skewed in a certain way, but that’s how it goes. All media coverage is meant to convey a certain narrative. It’s our responsibility to sift through and decipher between fact and bullshit. But sometimes we go too far. We start putting weight in conspiracy theories, and we begin questioning sound science and substantiated history. The moon landing happened. The holocaust wasn’t a hoax. The earth isn’t flat. Just because you saw otherwise on Tiktok or YouTube doesn’t make it true. There’s no veracity to those claims. In a day & age where anything can become viral, you have to understand that some things are said just for clicks and views. Don’t believe everything you see, and don’t believe everything you hear. 

However, you need to find a balance. All things in life require it. Like I said last time, you can’t have a dichotomy without both sides of the equation. You need to have a healthy amount of questioning, and a healthy amount of believing. You don’t want paranoia to fuel you, but you also don’t want to follow blindly. They didn’t really tell us this growing up, but adulthood often amounts to walking a tightrope. Things are rarely black and white. That’s an oversimplification of how the world works. “Everyone is a hero in their own story,” is a piece of advice that’s often given to aspiring authors. But don’t think for a second that just because it’s a tidbit used for creating fiction doesn’t mean that it doesn’t also have real-world application. People aren’t just good or evil for the sake of it—there’s more nuance than that. Morality aside, most people do have a justification for doing what they do. I’m not arguing whether it’s right or wrong, but everyone has their reasons.

Unfortunately, that also means that many people love to prove themselves right. They’ll pull quotes out of context to reinforce the points they are trying to make. This works a lot of the time, but it’s a disservice to all parties involved. It’s a manipulative tactic that helps people win arguments, but doesn’t necessarily unveil the truth. I think it’s safe to say that the most misquoted document is the Bible, but it’s not the only text to receive such treatment. We’ve heard people say often that, “I’d rather be feared than loved,” as if it’s a question of either/or. But that’s not what Machiavelli wrote in The Prince. The full quote says, “It is better to be feared than loved, if you cannot be both.” The second part of the sentence seems like a key piece to omit. Like me, Machiavelli was arguing that we must have balance. It’s not a question of this or that, it’s a question of how much of each. Be informed. 

That’s easier said than done, however. Misinformation runs rampant as technology advances. Some find it more convenient to retweet or share something before they factcheck it. It doesn’t take long to do the latter, but you need to train yourself to do so. Don’t allow others to take advantage of your ignorance. I’ve been through that before and it’s not a great feeling. I once had a boss use the butchered version of Machiavelli’s quote as a means of justifying his toxic behavior. He used fear as a way of keeping us suppressed, preventing us from speaking out about the culture. It was his way of keeping his foot on our necks. And it worked. Like many others before me, I let him walk all over me, because I didn’t know any better. I didn’t know what my worth was. I didn’t know how much respect I was entitled to. And I didn’t know that I deserved better than what he gave me.

Despite how much of an asshole he was, I still appreciate the effect he had on my life. If I hadn’t worked for him, I wouldn’t have experienced the lowest of the low. I wouldn’t have known how it felt to be used and thrown away like human garbage. I wouldn’t have known how miserable it was to feel like you were stuck. Without adversity to overcome I wouldn’t have overcame. Every experience in life can be used for your benefit—the good, the bad, and the ugly. All things come with a lesson or a takeaway. I firmly believe that you are destined to repeat the same mistakes or go through the same hardships if you don’t learn what you were supposed to learn. At first, it’s easy to say that, but harder to put it into action. But like all habits, it becomes easier over time.

Not all lessons are learned at the time of struggle, however. Some things can be learned after the fact. Hindsight is oftentimes quite informative. But living in the moment and thinking/looking ahead are equally as important. We have a past, a present, and a future for a reason. If we are to live as abundantly as possible, we must spend time thinking about all three. Not equally of course, but all three matter. Some people choose not to focus on the past, instead looking only towards their future. Others ignore both, focusing on the now, looking only for instant gratification. And still others can’t help but dwell on the past, regretting things that were done or going over different outcomes in their head. Overemphasis on any one of these areas can prove to be detrimental. 

I’ve overemphasized all three at various points in my life. But the thing that proved to be the most damaging was my failure to make the connection between all three. I thought of each phase separately, not coming to the realization that they’re interwoven in a way that you can’t think about one without the others. I didn’t yet have the ability to reflect on my past to inform my future, to use my vision for the future to dictate my present, to do the hard work in the present to set myself up for future success. None of this meant anything to me because I didn’t have a clear sense of what I was capable of. I lived a life of passivity, letting outside circumstance dictate how my story unfolded. I didn’t live the life I deserved because I had lost sight of what I thought that was. I didn’t seek out better opportunities because I was held back by my fear. At times of adversity I either ran or I hid. It was oftentimes the easy way out. It usually worked but was only a temporary fix. These issues still ran deep. By not drilling to the root, I gave these seemingly innocuous things room to fester and grow. The small things stacked on top of each other, and became something bigger. Ignoring them didn’t solve anything.

But it gave me peace of mind. “Out of sight, out of mind,” as they say. This mentality proved more damaging than I ever would’ve anticipated, but it drew me in because it had seemed so innocent. I was too afraid to face my issues head-on. I lacked mental fortitude back then, if I’d had some I would’ve realized that ignoring my problems was not a legitimate coping mechanism. However, if I hadn’t been led astray by that misconception I never would’ve become the person that I am today. I needed the adversity, the mistakes, and the lapses in judgment. I never would’ve learned the right way to do things if I hadn’t tried out the wrong ways first. We’re young and we’re dumb—we will make mistakes, but we have to learn from them. 

Something that’s stuck with me these past four or five years is that you can’t be afraid to be vulnerable. Vulnerability is the biggest step you need to take in order to live your life the way it’s meant to be lived. You can’t have a long-lasting, loving relationship if it lacks trust. You’ll have trouble making close friends if you don’t open up. You can’t get the most out of therapy if you refuse to dig into the past. It’s difficult to have a realistic outlook on your life trajectory if you’re not open and honest with yourself. Like many others, I ignored these things for far too long. I was conditioned to avoid the negative in my life. Anything that was too painful to think about, I refused to think about. I ignored it hoping that it would go away. Unfortunately, that’s not how things work. 

Circumstances cannot and will not change unless you’re willing to work at it. You can’t expect better from your life unless you’ve put in the effort. People don’t become superstars overnight. We don’t see how long or how hard others have toiled, but I can guarantee that the greatest role models have put their all into whatever endeavor they chose. Everyone walks a different path; each story is unique. But there is one thread in common. All those who seek greatness have made a conscious decision to no longer let fear dictate their lives. They have moved on from their past trauma. They have learned from their mistakes. They think about their future but live in the moment. They make decisions now that will pay off later. They don’t sit around waiting for miracles to happen; they plant their seeds, knowing that if they keep nurturing them there will be a bountiful harvest. They count their blessings, but know that more are yet to come. The best things in life come at a cost, but I assure you it will be worth it.

In order to move on from your past trauma, you need to reopen the wound. It hurts at first, but you’ll be better for it. You can’t tack on another band-aid or continue to ignore it, it will never heal that way. Drill down to the root. Fix your problems from the ground up. Relive your past so that you can have a better future. There’s no other way to move on. I know it’s scary, but everyone goes through adversity. Take a deep breath, and release yourself from your fear. Do not fear the pain, embrace it. You’ve already been through this once, and you made it out alive. Go back in and draw out the lessons. Your fear does not control you; you control your fear. It is your master no longer. You are destined for greatness. You are meant to show the world your worth. You will fear no longer, because you know who you are, you know what you’re capable of. You’ve shown it to yourself, now show it to the world. 

Spineless

You’re spineless
You have no backbone
Just a jellyfish flapping through the ocean
A bag floating on the breeze
A human doormat letting others walk upon thee
You’re directionless and rudderless
With no star to guide you
A sheep without a shepherd
A nomad without a home
A puppet on a string

“Dance,” they tell you, so dance you do
“Walk,” they tell you, so you do that too
“Sit, stay, roll over, speak,” are commands they give
“Come or go,” but not as you please
Only act when I tell you to act
Do as I say, I’ll guide you down the right path
Muzzle yourself so I don’t have to
Censor yourself for you speak false truths
I know what’s best for you for I am your master
I will guide you cause you’re lost without me

No more I say
I’m done with this
I will live in fear no longer
I am not your bitch
I am my own person
I am greater than this
I live the life I wanna live
For I was meant for better than this
I forge my own path
I find my own way
I am an individual
No more shall I obey
A tyrant, an oppressor, a controller
I will not be manipulated
I will not be suppressed
You’ve stood on my neck for far too long
But I’m there to bite your heel
I will rise up and take what’s mine
My life is my own
I have cut my string
I am a new man
Of my freedom, forever will I sing