![]() It happened just today. I woke up fine. It was a beautiful day and I was ready to conquer it! Breakfast. Check. Water flowers outside. Check. Get deck furniture out. Check. Prep flower beds. Check. Laundry washed. Check. Check. Check. Make Lunch. Check. Shower and get ready. Check. Read a self-help book. Check. And then the paralysis snuck in. Somewhere in between being suddenly exhausted and overwhelmed with all I "should" be doing, was me. I was pinned between the two so suddenly and I couldn't move. I was angry. Frustrated. And as time passed, the shame settled in. The kids were watching a movie on a beautiful summer day. Bad Mom. I have a million things that need to be organized, cleaned. Lazy. I could be reading or writing or learning something. Weak. Apply something you've learned! I kept shouting in my head. But I wasn't sure what I had learned. Have I learned anything to help me deal with this? What is this? Anxiety? The Depression? Did I let the bad thoughts in? I was supposed to control those. Should I call someone? How could I bother anyone? Who would I call? Everyone is working. Everyone is busy. And I'm not. I'm lying here, pinned. I'm doing NOTHING. Lazy. Weak. Bad. And here I am. Beginning. All. Over. Again. I was reminded of how fragile I am. It was OK to be fragile a couple month's ago when I finally started seeing a therapist after episodes that included suicidal thoughts and self-harm. It was OK to be fragile then. I was fighting for my life then, I was fighting for my family. I had to be gentle with myself. Forgiving. It was OK that I didn't cook dinner, that I did nothing but breathe all day long. It was OK to take a nap and let the kids watch too much TV. It was OK that we ate hot pockets too often and spent money we didn't have on fast food. It was OK that the house was a constant mess. It was OK. But, somehow since then, as I slowly started to clean more, slowly began to make meals instead of heating them up, slowly started to do a little more than just breathe... I fell back into being a perfectionist. I began expecting more of myself. I began thinking I was OK because I was doing more. Berne Brown describes perfectionism as such: "Perfectionism is not the same thing as striving for excellence. Perfectionism is not about healthy achievement and growth. Perfectionism is a defensive move. It's the belief that if we do things perfectly and look perfect, we can minimize or avoid the pain of blame, judgement, and shame. Perfectionism is a twenty-ton shield that we lug around, thinking it will protect us, when in fact it's the thing that's really preventing us from being seen." I can't even express how well this describes me! I don't want to be weak, lazy or bad not to mention all the other unkind shaming thoughts that race through my mind. So I use the little strength I have left to lift that giant-ass shield up to cover the fragile me. The shield of having a perfectly clean house. The shield of making breakfast, lunch and dinner all in one day. The shield of having the laundry done and put away. The shield of devouring self-help books to give myself the illusion of healing. The shield of being organized. On and on. The shield is heavy. No wonder I become exhausted so quickly. No wonder I am pinned down and frustrated with my own weakness and fragility. I can't hold that damn shield up for long anymore. And trying to has made me weaker and weaker. You see, I have been on this journey of growth for over a year now. I started writing almost every day and I devoured books by the best on becoming whole, healing, becoming better and becoming happier. I became more organized with Marie Kondo and a bullet journal to remember EVERYTHING. I set goals and accomplished them. I spent time serving, being with family and being with friends. My journey and the understanding I gained is documented well through these beautiful books and methods and habits but I was missing something vital. I unknowingly used all the wonderful things I had learned and added them to my shield. And oh, how it grew. My shield was big, shiny, and clean. Witty and nice. It was helpful and willing. It showed up for everything, said yes, agreed, allowed. Performed. Damn. It was like Captain Freaking America's Shield. And oh how well I carried that shield. But under the shield was me. Just me. Amy. And Amy, although master at yielding fancy shields, was deeply tired. She was small. The shield did it's job well. She wasn't seen, she wasn't heard. People admired that shield, they enjoyed it, they LOVED it. So she believed she needed it, they wouldn't love and admire her without it. She had put so much work into creating that beautiful shield but one day she was so exhausted that the shield came down. And frightened fragile Amy couldn't lift it back up. There was no where to go. No where to hide. And the shame and the pain swarmed. And there I was, beginning, again. And today as I set that pretty shield back down on the ground, I am beginning, again. It is time for me to grow, not my shield.
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Hi! I'm AmyI am a Christian wife and mother, a writer, and a recovering perfectionist who is tired of chasing happiness in all the wrong ways. I am now on a journey to find a deeper state of being. Join me on My Peace Project and we'll learn how to survive the chaos together! Archives
January 2021
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