Catalyst 27 – Ephemeral



This is for creative
therapy
catalyst twenty-seven: tell us about a painful memory.

Journaling Reads:

This one is really painful. Maybe my most painful memory ever.

Years ago, I was fourteen, or maybe a little younger. In the summer, we
lived on this island and there were two groups of kids my age. The group
I belonged to and the other one. One day, we were upstairs in the club
house and the guy from my group was talking to a guy from the other
group and he said, “Well the only ugly girl in our group is Karen. All
the girls in your group are ugly.”

That’s it. That’s all it is. That tiny moment that the guy probably
doesn’t even remember. I’m sure he doesn’t remember. Why would he? It
was nothing to him. A few cruel words. Maybe not even cruel to him.
Maybe it was his honest opinion. He didn’t know I was there. He wasn’t
trying to hurt me.

But it did.

I was there. I heard it. It broke me. Permanently. Twenty years later, I
still feel like the ugliest girl. The only ugly girl in a group. In
every group. I look at myself and I am incapable of seeing anything
else. It’s the reason I’m always the girl who’s behind the camera and
not in front of it. It’s the reason I don’t dance. It scarred me then.
It scars me now. Just writing this down brings tears to my eyes, all
these years later.

It’s amazing how a teeny tiny moment has completely changed my life. My
personality. My self-confidence. The way I look at myself. The way I
carry myself. The way I think of myself. The way I see myself. Looking
at it now, it seems silly that I should have let it ruin how I see
myself. But I don’t know how to stop it. I don’t know how to actually
let it go. It’s such a core part of who I am. It has become a fact such
a long time ago that I don’t know how to relearn. How to reform my
opinions of myself. It’s like redefining who I am.

It’s amazing how an ephemeral moment can leave such permanent scars.

4 comments to Catalyst 27 – Ephemeral

  • carolyn

    it’s been a while since you have last posted. hope all is well with you and your family!

  • Kim

    Hi Karen. I am going to add my voice of concern here. It’s been too long since we’ve heard from you. That was a very intense post you made last and I am so sorry that happened. But right now I am just hoping you’ve taken a vacation and that is why your site has been so silent. We miss you and hope everything is well.

  • Annie

    Let me join the list of people who’ve been dropping by to check for more beautiful pictures and stories from your life.

    Do hope all is well with you and your family.

    Love and hugs from India

  • David

    Just ran across your site while doing a google search. Sorry you had such a profound experience at such an impressionable age. Earlier this year I was able to shake off many of the feelings that you’re going through, but it took a near-death accident and a very humbling recovery to get past these deeply-embedded feelings. Hopefully you don’t need such severe therapy 😉 but thought i’d tell you that things can turn around. Best of luck to you.

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