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“Lay a firm foundation with the bricks that
others throw at you.” –David Brinkley
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Not all tears are created equal.
Some tears grow so large and hold so much sorrow that, when they are shed, they
seem to wash away all we previously knew. These tears leave behind chasms
filled with self-doubt and uncertainty, which cannot be filled. Instead, we are
left struggling to reshape ourselves, and our world, into something that makes
sense again. The result, for better or for worse, is a new self.
When I was fifteen, I shed such
tears. The first boy I ever loved had broken my heart. Now, of course, we all
know this is not the end of the world. We all get our hearts broken, usually
more than once, and almost always by the boys (or girls) we loved when we were
fifteen. But during this time, as I lay on the bed sobbing, my head in my
mother’s lap as if I were a baby again, my mother told me something I have
never forgotten. “There comes a time in all of our lives,” she said, “when
something completely throws us for a loop. I know it hurts, but don’t let it
break you. Learn from this.” Learn
from this. And so I did. Of course it was hard, as all lost loves are, but it
was a learning experience that helped to shaped the woman I am today.
There was, however, one small
problem with the advice my mother gave me. The problem was, my friends, a lack
of plurality. My mother said, “a time in
all of our lives,” not “so many times
that you will have no other choice but to analyze the linguistics of this
advice in a last-ditch effort to make sense of it all”. When this advice
was first bestowed upon me, I took it to mean that my fifteen-year-old
heartbreak was it. Fabulous! I had done it. The bad bits were out of the way
and now all that was ahead was sunshine, rainbows, and a young woman who knew
exactly who she was and what was ahead of her. Of course, I know now that I was
a moron.
Throughout my life I have faced
changes, heartbreaks, and tribulations I never imagined I would face. Luckily,
I am only in my twenties, so I am certain to have plenty of shit ahead. And
those loops my mother spoke of? Well, this year has been filled with them. So,
the way I see it, I only have one option- Learn from it. The bad news? My troubles are nowhere
near over. I am sure that my future holds plenty more of those self-altering
tears, as do all of yours (don’t shoot the messenger). The good news? For every
tear that wears away at our self-assurance, we are left with one more chance to
reshape ourselves and our lives.
Every time we lose a bit ourselves, we replace it with a newer, smarter
bit. A bit that knows more about the world. A bit that can better handle the
bricks that are thrown. A bit that, let’s face it, we can only hope will do
less stupid stuff than the previous bit did. All we have to do is let it go and learn from it.
This really helped me today :)
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