Before I quit skating back in 2011, I had decided my next freestyle program was going to be to Eleanor Rigby.
Eleanor Rigby
Picks up the rice in the church where a wedding has been
Lives in a dream
Waits at the window
Wearing the face that she keeps in a jar by the door
Who is it for?
I have lived my entire adult life wearing the face I keep in
a jar by the door.
It’s understandable, given my childhood. I was not an easy child for any mother,
between the OCD and the high IQ, but my mother came into parenting with the
scars of her own difficult childhood.
Today, she probably would have known to heal herself before becoming a
parent, but back then, she saw being a wife and mother as her salvation.
She had no idea what to do with a kid who just saw the world
so differently than everyone else. A kid
who taught herself how to read and do multiplication, but would get insanely
frustrated if things weren’t exactly ordered in her head. (For example, I nearly had a meltdown on the
first day of kindergarten….because the school bus didn’t have seatbelts. In 1979, when you could drive around in your
car without wearing a seatbelt.)
Overwhelmed by the meltdowns and scared of what the world
would do to her outlier child, she did what she learned from growing up in an
alcoholic family. Pretend. She would say things to me like, “you know,
you’re not going to have any friends if you act this way.” “Do you know how difficult you are to live
with?” In eighth grade, I’d have to come
home from school, detail every social interaction, and problem solve to see how
I could do better. Every day.
She was determined to jam my square peg into that round
hole, even if my self-esteem was destroyed in the process. Her anxiety over me was so great that she
would do whatever it took to gain total control of my life, even into
adulthood.
Instead of creating a confident young woman who glided
through social interactions, she created a woman who felt the need to pretend
to be someone else to garner acceptance.
I created my face in the jar and learned how to navigate life wearing it. My mother loved “Face in the Jar” Erin better
than the person I really was. At one
point, after a sorority Mother’s Day tea, said to me, “why can’t you be like
this all the time?” Because, Mom, it’s
an act. It’s not me.
In the process of healing from the breakup of a four-year
relationship, I’ve been reflecting on connection and my connection to the
world. That face in the jar has allowed
me to navigate the adult world, but I don’t feel connected to it in any way,
shape or form. I have friends, but not a
single best friend who gets me on that deeper level, because it’s hard to let anyone
in. Don’t even get me started about
dating, which is all about putting your best foot forward while having a good
time….until it’s time to take down the façade and be vulnerable with each
other. My ex once got angry at me
because I didn’t trust him. He was
absolutely right, but it never occurred to both of us that perhaps we should
have stepped back from our relationship and worked on building that trust. Instead, he decided that because I didn’t
trust him, he had carte blanche to treat me however he wanted.
And that’s the thing about my face in the jar. It’s a laid back, amenable person who has
allowed herself to be stepped on, walked over, or in the case of my ex,
steamrolled. It’s someone who is easy to
ignore or fade into the background. It’s
someone who never complains or creates drama for others. It’s someone who is easily forgotten, someone
who knows how to be invisible. Someone
completely different than the woman whose mind is always on overdrive with
thoughts, ideas, and keeping ahead of her OCD.
One of the things that has been tumbling in my mind of late
is whether it’s time to leave the face in the jar when I leave the house. Then I look at the world right now and see
all the the anger and vitriol and judgement and closemindedness and intolerance
towards each other. It saddens me that
as a culture, we are so dogmatic about receiving conformation about our own
beliefs that we have zero respect for someone who disagrees with them. We are supposed to be a country where each of
the 330 million people get to believe whatever they want, but instead, I see a
country where if you don’t conform 100% to whatever, you are automatically horse
manure…and I’m scared of how I’ll be treated if I didn’t wear my face in the jar.
Eleanor Rigby resonates because so many of us keep faces in
jars by our doors, afraid of what would happen if people saw our true
selves. We’re supposed to be the
champions of individuality, but instead we force people into silent conformity. To fix our country, we need to start here,
and it’s why I no longer want to hide.
6 comments:
I rather envy your having been able to create suvh a mask. I never could, and it mattered, at boarding-school, if you were not free others. At 67, of course, I no longer give a damn, but it mattered back in the day.
It's been useful at times when you need to put on a brave face, but to be honest, I would have rather my mother given me the space to make the mistakes and grow. Even in my 40s, I'm not very confident or resilient.
BTW, seeing "Mrs. Redboots" gave me fond memories of the skating forums 15 years ago. :)
I think you’d be surprised at how many of us have those faces. Who require the pep talks to ourselves to get out the door to the plans we made, while simultaneously dreading the facade we would need to maintain if we went. I would have described you as smart, kind and selfless. I still feel those attributes are probably true. Have you ever followed Glennon Doyle? She has lots of good words in a not-preachy way about being your truest self.
Actually, I think the person without some sort of face in the jar is the exception, so I wouldn’t be surprised at all. Never heard of Glennon Doyle, though. Thanks for the suggestion and the kind words.
Wearing the armour or the mask all the time is exhausting. Working from home I'm so much happier because I don't have to wear it all the time.
So true! It’s definitely been a silver lining of this very stormy year.
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