Toxic Humanity

I have to admit, I was probably not the most pleasant person to be around when I was younger. I’ve said before that who I am now is not entirely compatible with who I used to be. We would not have gotten along. A lot of it was because I lacked self-awareness. But I was also self-involved and self-absorbed. I was so caught up in my own issues that I didn’t pay much attention to the world around me. I regret that but it’s not something that I can change. All I can do is learn from my mistakes and do better in the future. 

Everyone’s life journey has its ups and downs. Each playing out with its own rhythm and timing. That being said, for a while I had a hard time coping with the changes that life threw at me, which has been well-documented. Puberty was not a great time for me, but what came after was even worse. Little did I know, but the coping mechanisms I had developed over the years did not actually work. As with most everything else, I learned that the hard way. What can I say? Someone who is as hardheaded as I was needs to see things go to shit firsthand before they’re willing to change their behaviors and tendencies.

But even after I realized that things weren’t working I didn’t really know what to do differently. I didn’t know how to fix everything that was broken. In truth, I wouldn’t have been able to fix it on my own—I know that now—but I pretended like things were fine and that I had the answers. It was easy for me to bottle everything up inside, and try to ignore all my negative emotions. It was easy for me to let bad behavior slide, and let myself be mistreated and manipulated. I let people walk all over me because I didn’t really know how to say no back then or how to put up boundaries or how to stand up for myself. I felt helpless, like my life was out of my control. It wasn’t a good feeling, and it wasn’t something I let go of easily.

I internalized all of the negative things that happened to me, even if I didn’t deal with the emotion head-on. I just suppressed it, and kept it with me. I held grudges and I kept receipts. Sometimes I acted out of pettiness, but mostly I suffered in silence due to my passive nature. It wasn’t actually a solution, but it felt like one. And I was content to let things play out around me. I had accepted my station in life, thinking that I wasn’t capable of changing it. I carried this mentality into adulthood, and while the consequences weren’t immediately visible, it doesn’t mean that they didn’t exist.

Another lesson I learned the hard way—ignoring your issues doesn’t make them go away. In fact, they actually get worse. Each year as my birthday came and went, I buried my pain and trauma even deeper. And the longer I ignored them, the worse my issues got. Even though I was a year older, it didn’t mean that I became a year wiser. Rather, it meant another year of bad habits and faulty coping mechanisms. It meant another year stuck in my ways. Another year of pretending. Another year of lying to myself. Another year of convincing myself that what I wanted didn’t matter. I had the worst of both worlds: I was self-absorbed, but I also didn’t prioritize my needs.

How is this possible, you wonder? Depression, anxiety, and toxic behavior. The first two we’ve covered in depth. This is a mental health blog after all, so it’d be a problem if we hadn’t! My fight against depression and anxiety has been a lifelong struggle for me—that’s old news. But even after finding healing in therapy, this is something I have to deal with every single day. It’s easy to fall back into old ways, old habits, and old mindsets if you don’t stay vigilant. I’ve conquered my demons, but it doesn’t mean that they simply go away. They stay with me forever, but the scars remind me of the decisions I have to continue to make. I need to take what I learned and apply it and reapply it constantly. If I don’t, then all that work was for naught. 

I might have hours, days, or weeks when I’m in a melancholy state. But I can’t let that snowball into something bigger. I can’t let that become permanent, not again. I won’t let myself relapse, I can’t. I refuse to give in, and let my demons win. The changes I’ve made are too valuable to let them go to waste. I’ve worked too hard to allow things to go back to the sorry state they were in. I might find myself in a funk at times, but I also must find my way back. I have to dig my way out, but I don’t want to dig myself deeper. That’s the biggest difference between who I was then and who I am now. 

Everything I did back then only did more harm than good, driving me deeper into my depression. My aforementioned coping mechanisms consisted of ignoring things, pretending that problems didn’t exist, and letting things slide. I neither fixed issues nor addressed them directly. Instead I put them off for future me to deal with. Seems fine for a time, but one day you will reach your breaking point and you will have to pay the piper. If you don’t deal with issues as they arise you will explode when the time comes. It’s better to blow off some steam a bit at a time than to try to tackle everything all at once. Of course, doing that will lead to some upfront adversity and you’ll have tough decisions/conversations to make, but it’s better for you in the long run.

Unfortunately for people like us who are suffering through various mental illnesses, this coping method isn’t always that obvious of an answer. That would make it too easy. We’re more inclined to keep our emotions pent up than we are to wear them on our sleeves. We’re afraid of confrontation. We’re afraid of disappointing or upsetting others. We’re afraid of being vulnerable. We don’t want to bring others down with our sadness. We don’t think they will understand. We don’t want to relive our pain. We don’t want to be a burden. We don’t want to feel helpless. We don’t want to seem useless. Our concerns are valid, but where do they stem from?

The answer most likely varies for each individual. For me, all of my issues could be traced back to my lack of confidence. Up until twelve or thirteen I lived a relatively happy life. I had friends at school and at church. My grades were great for a while. But then in sixth grade, I got my first C, and there were two harrowing incidents where I was accused of something that I didn’t do. The following year, I had a hands-off math teacher that didn’t explain the material well. And I was too shy to ask for help, so naturally, I struggled. These experiences, coupled with others along the way started to sap my confidence. And once that happened, it sent me in a tailspin that I wasn’t able to recover from.

It would be easy to place absolute blame on my teachers for my diminishing confidence. Educators need to have a certain amount of tact, understanding, and compassion when dealing with elementary school kids and pre-teens. It’s clear to me that a number of my teachers were lacking in those regards. But blaming them would absolve me of any responsibility or accountability, which as I stated a few posts ago is something that I’m no longer willing to do. Sure, maybe things would’ve played out differently if I’d had better teachers, but things might’ve also played out differently if I had reacted better or if I had adopted a more optimistic outlook. Everybody and everything played a part in the way that I turned out, self-included. Each factor may have differed in size or importance but it doesn’t mean that it didn’t have an effect. 

The cumulative result was that I struggled in school, in creating and maintaining friendships, and I was woefully incompetent at finding love and acceptance. I didn’t know what I was doing, although I liked to pretend that I did. It looked like pigheadedness at the time, but now that I’m older, I think that it was likely more nuanced than that. It was part of a defense mechanism that I had inadvertently constructed. Outwardly I wanted to appear capable and confident, because inwardly I had started to buy into the doubt. I started to believe that I wasn’t smart, that I was a good-for-nothing, that I wasn’t going to get very far in life. To me, my lack of success in all facets of life was proof that I was always going to be a failure.

Really though, what exactly was I expecting? I was a teenager struggling to figure out his purpose in life—no different than any other American youth at that age. Rarely does someone that young know what the fuck they wanna do. High school and college are there to help you find who you are, and to figure out your calling. You’re supposed to make your mistakes then, so that you’re better informed for the future. Everybody makes mistakes, because no one is perfect. I know people say that all the time, but for whatever reason, this is something that young me didn’t internalize. Part of that can be attributed to the perfectionist within, but again it would be disingenuous to leave it at that. 

What it came down to was having a toxic mindset. I didn’t deal with things in a healthy way. I didn’t allow myself to make mistakes or be imperfect. I wasn’t accepting of my quirks and intricacies, and I didn’t love myself for who I was. I tried not to show emotion because in my mind anger and sadness were bad, and happiness and joy were fleeting. I downplayed my strengths, and I refused to acknowledge my weaknesses. I didn’t know what I was doing but I also didn’t heed outside advice. I convinced myself that I needed to have all the answers otherwise I was worthless. I lacked ambition and drive because I had no direction. I rarely told adults what career path I wanted to follow, in part because I genuinely didn’t know. But the rare instances when I felt confident enough to share, I was shot down quickly. A less sensitive kid might’ve shrugged this off, and been like, “fuck you. I’m going to do what I want to do.”

But of course, that wasn’t me. That wasn’t how I was wired. This would’ve contradicted my passive, anti-confrontational nature. So instead of reacting, I clammed up and I stayed quiet. I built up walls and distanced myself from everyone. I pretended like it didn’t affect me, knowing full well that it bothered me immensely. My rejections and failures were the only things I ever thought about. I never thought about how I could fix things, what I could do better, or what I was good at. Each day I wallowed in self-pity, trapped in my pit of despair. I told myself things like, “you can’t do this,” or “you’re not meant for that,” or “see? I told you you’re dumb.” I know now that this mental self-flagellation only made my depression harder to deal with. I didn’t want to feel this way, but it was what I was most familiar with.

So the cycle repeated. Each time I experienced rejection I took it personally, but I didn’t say or do anything to address it. Every time someone told me I couldn’t do something or that I wasn’t capable, I believed them. Every time someone shat on my dreams, I took it as a sign that my aspirations weren’t rational or attainable. Each time something ended poorly, I took it as confirmation of the lies I told myself. Before long I stopped believing in myself. And when that happened, my dreams began to die. I stopped thinking of what I wanted to do, and I started thinking about what I thought my parents wanted me to do, or what I thought my peers expected of me. I was only just projecting onto others.

That’s besides the point though. Either way I was telling myself that I don’t matter. That my needs weren’t important. That my dreams were delusional. Over time, I began to believe it. And everything that made me me became more and more suppressed. Before I knew it I had lost sight of who I was. I was a shell of a person, just going through the motions. Living out the life that I thought I was supposed to live. There was no passion or fire, just sadness and loneliness. And all this because I had grown used to bottling everything up, and suffering in silence.

Things may have turned out differently if I’d had a less toxic mindset. If I had been more vocal. If I hadn’t let things slide. If I had known how to establish boundaries. But I also wouldn’t be who I am today without my adversity. I wouldn’t have found my strength without seeing my weakness. I wouldn’t have found my passion if I didn’t first try living out the life I thought I was supposed to live. I wouldn’t have found what I was good at without my past failures. I wouldn’t have found happiness without healing. But I wouldn’t have needed healing if I wasn’t broken.

Depression hurts and it sucks. I wouldn’t wish it on anybody. But through it I found who I am. And without my experiences, I wouldn’t be able to share the insight I have today. It is tough, but you will get through it, because you are strong and intelligent and capable. You are worthy of praise, and your life is worth living. But first you have to admit to yourself that you don’t have all the answers. Don’t be afraid to ask for help. Don’t be afraid to reach out. Don’t be afraid to speak up. Just don’t keep everything bottled in. It’ll be hard at first—old habits die hard—but it’ll be better for you in the end.

Finding My Place

What do I mean in the grand scheme of things?
Where do I fit in?
What does life mean to me?
Where do I begin?

Never really knew my place in life
Never really felt all that accepted
Under-appreciated and misunderstood
That’s how it’s always been

Never been anyone’s favorite person
Never been referred to as a best friend
It had always been a bit one-sided
People meant more to me than I meant to them

Quickly forgotten and easily overlooked
Sometimes I feel invisible, just a character in a book
It’s the same ol’ story, destined to repeat
I’m there for a short time, easy to ignore
Not super memorable, just another guy
“Oh yeah, who was he again? Oh, he was that guy”
Every connection has the same ending

I was there for a short time
But then I was easily forgotten
I move on from friend group to friend group
Hoping to find a place to stay
But it’s only ever temporary
And that’s it, I’m trying to find my place once again

No permanent place for me
Nowhere I belong
Making friends had always been tough for me
But it’s gotten even harder as the years go on

Time and time again I’ve tried to find my place
I fit the dynamic for a little bit, but then my time is up
A wandering nomad on an endless journey
Is this what I’m destined for?
A life devoid of acceptance?

What do I mean to them?
Where do I fit in?
What does life mean to me?
Where do I begin?

Am I doing something wrong?
Is there something wrong with me?
Only there for a short time, but then they forget about me
I’m finding my place in the world
And so far I don’t belong
As time rolls on, will I find what I’m looking for?
Will I find somewhere to be, and stop moving on?

Seeing Ghosts

I keep dreaming about the past
Seeing things that happened
But in different ways
Recalling memories that didn’t come to pass
Which is real and which is fake?
Was a minor detail misremembered?
Is my subconscious trying to tell me something?

The recurring dreams are disturbing to say the least
Reminding me of what I used to think were better days
But better they were not
Different yes, but not better
They often say that, “ignorance is bliss”
A truer statement was never uttered

Things were different then
I was so stubborn, so stuck in my ways
Brainwashed and blinded to the truth
Life was easier then, when things were black and white
There was only one way to live, it was either us or them

But as I grow older I see the error in my ways
I see how misguided I had been
I can see how close-minded I was
I’ve changed and it’s only for the better

But sometimes when I dream I go back in time
I’m brought back to days of old
I re-experience past traumas
I go through the same frustrations
I encounter people that I have left in my past

I wake up unsettled and disturbed
I’ve been seeing ghosts
Reminders of what kind of person I used to be
I’ve vowed never to return to that
Never to be the judgmental asshole I once was

But easier said than done
My subconscious has a hard time letting go
A hard time shutting the door
A hard time saying goodbye to the people I used to know
I’ve been seeing ghosts

Reminded of who I used to be
Reminded of the hate that used to settle in my heart
Reminded of the false doctrine I had been told
That’s not who I am anymore, that will never come to be
In my waking I know this is not me
But my subconscious has a hard time letting go
I’ve been seeing ghosts, but that is all they will ever be

White Noise

A few weeks ago I reached post #100—a momentous milestone (yay me). So what did I do to celebrate? Nothing, nothing at all. Because it really doesn’t matter to me. It doesn’t matter if I write 100 posts or 200, I’ll never be satisfied. I don’t do this for the milestones or the accolades. I do this because this is who I am. I’m a writer and a mental health advocate, so this is what I do. I write, and write, and I write some more. 

Reaching an arbitrary number doesn’t change anything for me. I don’t write a post, call it good, and that’s it I’m done. I still need to keep grinding and chipping away. So I finish one thing then I start another. That’s just the way it goes. My hard work will pay off but not if I don’t put in the time. My effort matters more than anything else. It doesn’t matter if my results are good or bad if my effort is shoddy. I won’t continue on an upwards trajectory if I don’t put in the work. I won’t learn or improve if I don’t try to the best of my ability. I won’t get to where I want to go if I don’t do my part.

Just because I create my own schedule doesn’t mean I don’t still have a job to do. After all, this is the life I chose. No one told me to leave the workforce. No one forced me to try my hand at writing. This is what I wanted, and as such I have my responsibilities—if I don’t owe it to my audience, I owe it to myself at the very least. There are certain things I knew that I was signing up for, but there are many other things that I’m learning along the way. Such is the way of life. You can’t prepare for every outcome. Life has its surprises and its curveballs. The best that I can do is learn and adapt and keep an open mind.

What else is there? I can’t keep trying things the same way if they don’t work. I learned that the hard way when I was younger. But I’m not the same stubborn youngster that I used to be. I’ve changed, and I approach things differently now. Instead of running or hiding from my adversity, I face it head on now, and keep my mind open to possible outcomes. I know what I have to do—put my head down and grind. I can either work hard and power through my hardships, or I can make excuses. I know which one I’m choosing. There’s no other way for me to get better at my craft than to take the good with the bad. 

As I’ve said before, after I quit my job at the beginning of 2022, I spent more than half a year working on my novel in isolation. While I did improve as a writer, there was a point of diminishing returns that no one had warned me about. I stalled out because there were no other eyes on my writing. There was no external force to push me to a higher level, so my growth was limited. I would only improve up til a certain extent. Past that, I was just wasting my time, because my writing was never going to get to where I needed it to be—although, I didn’t know it at the time. I was equal parts naive and equal parts delusional. But at least I had the wherewithal to realize that something wasn’t working.

A younger version of me would’ve given up. Taken it as evidence that the universe didn’t want me as a writer. He would’ve convinced himself that he was a failure and that writing wasn’t for him. He would’ve shelled up and wallowed in his depression. Seen his life spiraling out and allowed it to continue. Done absolutely nothing to get to where he wanted to go. He wouldn’t have pushed through. But push through I did, and I’m much happier for it. I’m not the same kid who used to surrender at the first sign of adversity. “Okay Doubt. You win.” I’m not the same kid who used to take criticism as an indication that I wasn’t built for this. Outside noise doesn’t matter. If you’re passionate about something you will take the steps necessary to excel. 

Unfortunately, that’s something I have to remind myself time and time again. For creatives sometimes we get so caught up in each individual work that we lose sight of the bigger picture. We’re trying to build our legacy so we put our heads down and grind. We go through our process over and over and over again, trying to build something that we’re proud of. It doesn’t always make sense looking from the outside in. Sometimes it doesn’t look like we’re making any progress. Sometimes it seems like we’re just putzing around and wasting time. But we are working, same as any other nine to five. The only difference is that we don’t have immediate results that we can show the world. 

I admit that this could be hard for someone who’s used to seeing instantaneous, tangible results. “Why hasn’t he written the book yet?” “Where’s the goddamn album?” “Why haven’t you sold any paintings?” Be patient and let us work. Admittedly, all creatives are perfectionists to varying degrees. We don’t like to put out work that we’re not happy with. That’s just not in our DNA—at least not from the start. Our art takes time. It takes tinkering and editing. Adding and subtracting. Shaping and molding. Eventually something will come of it, but the timing isn’t for you to decide. Let the artist continue to work, free of distractions.

Early on, it was easy for me to filter out the noise. I had a vision for what I wanted to do, and I kept toiling away towards it. I was seeing growth each week, knowing that I was getting better. Of course, it helped that I was still employed when I first started writing. People generally left me alone and allowed me to pursue my hobby in peace. Unfortunately, once I quit was when attitudes started to shift. It wasn’t noticeable at first, but it became more evident as time passed. It also didn’t help that for a while I felt like my skill level had plateaued. I try my best not to listen to the criticism, good or bad, as both only serve as a distraction to me. But it’s easier said than done. I’m only human, so sometimes I forget that I’m trying to cancel out the noise. It shouldn’t catch me by surprise, since I’m supposed to know better, but occasionally it does. And that’s the worst thing for me.

Unfortunately, that’s what happened to me the other week. I got sucked back in and let down my guard. I let a cold reaction get to me. I let the words distract me, which took me away from my work. Which caused me to lose focus. Which filled me with doubt and caused my confidence level to waver. I wasn’t supposed to let that happen. I know better. Aside from this space, I don’t generally talk about my writing much with other people. It’s not relevant unless someone brings it up or asks me what I’m doing. Otherwise I have no reason to talk about it. And even then I don’t like to go too much in depth—I think it’s best to temper expectations. I know where I stand as a writer, and I don’t need any validation. But I also don’t want to be put on a pedestal. My novel will be done when it’s done. Hopefully you’ll enjoy it, but no skin off my back if you don’t. 

I know what I’m capable of. I know where my ability lies. I know what I’m working towards. I just have to remind myself of it sometimes. And I have to learn and relearn to tune out the noise. I need to maintain my focus regardless of what anyone else says. Outside opinion, good or bad, doesn’t mean anything to me. The praise or the hate might motivate me to write more, but it has no effect on whether or not I write better. The only way for me to get better is to keep on writing. So in order to do that, I need to put my head down, and block out the world. 

It doesn’t matter if you’re friends or family. It doesn’t matter if you’re offering your love or support. What you think we may need might not be what we need. Let the artist work and don’t try to interfere. The timeline isn’t for you to decide. And your opinion has no bearing on the outcome. The process most likely won’t make sense to you, but every artist has one for a reason. This is how we work best. This is how we create the best product that we can. This is how we make something that we’re proud of. If we maintain our focus and put in the time, we will create something beautiful. We just need to filter out the noise.

Same Energy

Keep that same energy
You didn’t care for me then
So don’t pretend like you care now
You didn’t even try to give me what I needed
Didn’t even think to find out what it was
So don’t try that now
It’s too late and it’s fake
Just something you do to feel better about your past failings
You wanna act like you took care of me
But it was never what I needed
It was never right and it was never enough

I have so many words I want to say to you
So much that I need to get off my chest
But I can’t think of how, and I just get jumbled up
I’m better with words written than words spoken
But it means nothing now, because I can never get my point across
You don’t get me, you barely even try
You and I will never see eye to eye
You believe that you’re helping me
You believe that good intentions are enough

But all you do is interfere
You’re a world class meddler, and it makes it harder for me
I don’t need your help, I never asked for it
You always just get in my way
None of your motives are pure
Always looking to get something out of it
Looking to have things your way
I’m tired of it, tired of your judgment
Tired of you telling me what to do
Tired of your snide comments
Tired of you second guessing me at every turn
I’m tired of it, so fed up

But what can I do?
I can’t make you stop
Anytime I disagree with you, you make me feel guilty
Anytime I fight your manipulation, you blame me
I know better than to fall for your wiles and tricks
I know better than to let you do this to me
But it’s easy to forget how you make me feel
It’s easy to forget all the times you’ve hurt me
But no more, I won’t let you disrupt my peace

So keep that same energy
You didn’t care for me then
So don’t care for me now
You didn’t give me what I needed before
It’s too late for that now
I am who I am
And I never really needed you, I see that now
You told me who I should be instead of embracing me for me
So keep that same energy
I’ll reap my blessings and you’ll have none
I’ll show you who I am, but that’s it, we’re done

Writing. Plain, simple, unadulterated. I am a storyteller, an essayist, a poet, a writer, a thinker, a mental health advocate, a regular real life human being