I’ve always been afraid of getting lost.
I don’t mean just a little afraid. I mean the kind of afraid that sits in my gut and makes me want to run and hide. Sometimes it feels as though I can’t breathe. Thoughts race through my mind resulting in confusion. I don’t know what to do. Driving in a place I’ve never been before, I’ve sometimes had to work hard to keep my cool and keep going, rather than freezing in place.
My panic attacks can happen anywhere. They can arise in a crowd of people as I’m being pushed, shoved, and bumped along. I’ve had them walking through Times Square in New York. I once had one at a wedding where I didn’t know any of the other guests. Traveling to places like Greece and Portugal where I didn’t speak the language have also been times of panic for me.
These seemingly uncontrollable reactions seem to be about my fear of being abandoned, of looking stupid, and my having a low sense of self esteem. They’re about getting lost in life … fear of the unknown, of being alone and unable to take care of myself.
As a kid, I rarely felt capable of doing anything right. My parents were very critical. I never mowed the lawn properly, or got the dishes as clean as they wanted them to be. And I rarely got the perfect grades they wanted me to get in school. Getting a C on a test was like flunking in their eyes. I didn’t think much of myself either. I followed the rules, tried my best, but always felt like a loser. Sometimes I just plain gave up trying.
As a result, I’ve wasted a lot of time and energy searching for things I didn’t think I had … approval, love, and a purpose. Without them I was continuously lost, unsure of myself, and prone to painful moments of panic.
Part of the problem was that I didn’t know what approval, love, and purpose looked like. I was too busy watching my back, or preparing to run or fight back, to see that I was loved, that many people respected me, and that I was not broken.
A year or so after I was married, I was parked diagonally in front of a pharmacy where I had to pick up a prescription. While I was inside, the person who parked next to me opened his car door, slamming it into the side of my car, leaving a huge dent. After we exchanged insurance information and I was on my way home, I started to panic. I was convinced that Bill would be mad at me for putting a dent in our newly purchased car. I was expecting his reaction to be like my father’s would have been … blaming me for “letting” this happen by parking to close to the car next to me.
By the time I got home I was in tears. When Bill came out to help me carry packages in from the car, I tearfully started apologizing for the dent. He calmly asked me how it happened and when I told him, he held me in his arms and told me it wasn’t my fault. He asked, “How could you think that?”
After our son was born, I spent a few months battling postpartum depression. When I saw a therapist to get help, he realized I was suffering from something more than mixed up hormones. His big question to me was, “What are you so afraid of?” My response was, “I don’t know.”
But his question began to haunt me and I began the slow process of trying to find the answers to his query.
As I examined old memories and explored the road I had been traveling, I found the cloak of victimhood I began to wear as a child and tore it to shreds. I started taking responsibility for who I was and what I did. I began to see that my parents had done the best they could … that they had their own difficulties to overcome … that I didn’t have to live by their rules or limit myself to what they would approve of.
Fear still occasionally jumps out of the shadows, finding me vulnerable, and sometimes ready to run. But it’s more easily banished now. I know what love looks like, and that the only person’s approval I need is my own. I’m no longer afraid of getting lost. If I don’t know where I happen to be at any given time, I know that nothing terrible is going to happen, and that I’ll soon be back on track in the direction of where I want to go.
Thank you for sharing your story Joan. So glad to have you on this journey we call life!
Val x
Thanks, Val. It is a journey and not being on it is not an option.
This post is an example of the kind of vulnerability that Brené Brown would say leads to wholeheartedness. You described beautifully the fear many people have at one time or other. Your courage to track that fear back to its source may have been your first memoir work.
Thank you, Shirley, for you kind words. Brene Brown’s thoughts on vulnerability are wonderful. We are all vulnerable and have fears, but not everyone knows that letting them out of their cage in the light of day, can bring us happiness and helps us to breathe more deeply.
“I know what love looks like, and that the only person’s approval I need is my own.”
yes, Yes, YES! Amen siSTAR!
Thanks so much, Laurie, for cheering me on!
Interesting how we all have fears of something. My ancient fear is of getting trapped, because that is how I often felt in my childhood. Sometime in my adult life, I realized that I have choices as an adult that I didn’t when I was a child. In those moments when that fear wants to show its face, I imagine going back and taking the child who was me by the hand and leading her out of her situation.
Thank you for sharing this. It makes me look forward to your book all the more.
Saloma,
“In those moments when that fear wants to show its face, I imagine going back and taking the child who was me by the hand and leading her out of her situation. ”
I sometimes do that too. It really works.
Joan, you and your words are simply beautiful. Thanks for sharing your journey.
Cindy, Thank you so much. You’re a sweetheart!
I had the opposite experience — understanding, loving parents, but a husband who would have freaked out after I had an accident and yelled at me. I think he was probably yelled at as a kid. I can hear the “parent voice” he uses when things happen to innocent people. Which is worse? Sounds like Bill is the perfect sweetheart for you — and most likely you for him.
Gail, It’s amazing where life takes us. I hope you’ve been able to find some common ground with him and talk about his treatment of you.
Yes, Bill is my perfect sweetheart!