Showing posts with label Birth Order. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Birth Order. Show all posts

Saturday, January 6, 2018

Justice


Justice: A story about my first born self

If you read my post yesterday you know that I recently read a book that contained some information about how my birth order has affected my personality.  One thing mentioned in the book was the first born children have a strong sense of justice and law and order.  I'm also taking part in a writing class as part of the National Writing Project.  One of the assignments of the class is to produce personal writings.  The story you are about to read was my first personal interest writing.  I think it is an entertaining of example of how my beliefs of law and order have affected my life experiences.  

Enjoy :)

I'm Sorry Mrs. Hallam:


One of my worst elementary school memories is the time I forgot my homework.  As a child, I was very anxious and, as a result, very forgetful.  I struggled a great deal with anxiety and depression.  The smallest mistakes would set the perfectionist that lived in my brain into a tail spin.  It started with crying when I missed a question on a test, or hating myself when I didn’t know the answer.  This progressed to full on, body collapsing, meltdowns over a pencil that had dropped to the floor.  I remember getting physically sick at the thought of the stress that came with another school day.  My mind was constantly reeling about what things that I had or hadn’t done and this led to more mistakes as I had difficulty remembering everything I needed to do to have a “perfect” day.  
One night my teacher assigned typical homework; write one sentence for each spelling word.  As a people pleasing, brown nosed student I spent the evening writing and rewriting the perfect sentences.  The next morning when it came time to turn in my homework, I realized that my worst fear had come true.  I had left my work on my desk in my bedroom!  What would I do?  What should I say?  Instant nausea!  I told the teacher what had happened and received my dreaded consequence.  I would miss recess to complete the homework and, worse still, have my name on the board as a constant reminder of my failure.
I did my time without fanfare and completed the work.  I was able to remember pieces of the sentences I had done the night before and used some of that to finish just as recess ended.  Of course I wanted to turn my work in RIGHT THEN.  I didn’t want to take the chance that I could misplace it again.  Plus I had to get my name off the board.  Unfortunately, my teacher was busy and asked me to turn it into the homework bin the next morning.
The next morning came around and I bet you will never guess what happened…I LOST IT AGAIN!  Sick to my stomach, I rushed to the bathroom in tears.  What could I do?  I didn’t want to miss another day of recess.  I had done the work...TWICE!  I couldn’t leave my name up there on the board.  I was a good student, never in trouble.  When I got back to the classroom I noticed my teacher was distracted with a group of students so I did the unthinkable.  I walked past the white board, back to the slick white surface, and daringly erased my name.  No one saw me or noticed the red in my cheeks as my heart raced over what I had just done.  When my teacher went through the morning routine, she checked the board for names and mine was not there.  She never even noticed.
I never brought this moment up again with the teacher, but the guilt ate away at my soul.  Years went by.  Am I a bad person?  I’m a liar!  Did she know?  Was she disappointed in my?  Finally, I am an adult.  A college graduate who can hold this dark secret no longer.  I sat my family down in our living room.  They look suspicious.  What could this possibly be about?  My parents know that I am about to share some dark piece of me.  Finally, I confess.  I tell the whole story of my horrible decision to tell a lie.  I felt the sweet freedom that comes when an enormous weight has been lifted off your shoulders.  Everyone else thinks how silly I am.  My sister and father, notorious troublemakers, finds the whole event hilarious.   They cannot fathom why this minor event should continue to affect my life in such a momentous way.  What matters is that I finally feel a bit of peace and to Mrs. Hallam, wherever you are, just know...I’m so sorry!

Friday, January 5, 2018

155: Pleasers


Pleasers: why women don't have to make everyone happy to be happy

As I mentioned in a previous post, last year was not the greatest year so when I walked up to begin my journey into nonfiction on the very first aisle, this book practically jumped off the shelf and into my arms.  The book then sucks you in from the back page with three simple questions:

1. Do you have a hard time saying no to people?
2. Do you feel guilty taking time out for yourself?
3. Do you feel overwhelmed by responsibilities?

If you answered yes to any of these questions, you might be a pleaser.  How ridiculous!  Doesn't everyone feel this way sometimes.  I only have to feel one of these things and all of a sudden something is wrong with me.  Well, congratulation to the author, you have me hooked.  Now I have to figure out how to fix this...

Turns out...I am a pleaser.  The book was right.  But there are many different types of pleasers and not all of them are bad news.  I found that I connected most to the stories of the played out pleaser.  This was someone who is highly motivated and a perfectionist (which it turns out causes all kinds of problems).  Played out pleasers are willing to do everything they can, but rarely say they can't take care of something.  They hold it all inside as an angry and uptight person that erupts in private, but maintain a happy face for the world.  Boy if my husband could read that!  He often complains that I seem angry or unhappy when the slightest things set me off schedule.  I'm not actually angry...just tired.

How did I get this way?  Well, it wasn't because of a bad relationship with my Dad like the book tries to point out.  In fact, my dad is AWESOME!!!!! I believe it is a result of the second idea in the book...birth order to blame.  Here are some traits that I have as a first born:

  • Perfectionist
    • The author dedicates an entire chapter on how my perfectionism will eventually destroy me into a never ending pit of despair until I learn to let go of my crazy goals and go for mediocre...never happening.  I guess I will wallow in excellence forever :)
  • Reliable
  • Conscientious (try to be)
  • List Makers
    • I think the author visited my office
  • Well Organized
    • This led to a huge debate at my house.  Mostly because my sister...a raucous last-born took offense to the idea that I would be considered more organized than her.  She would be right.  She is often more neat and clean than I am.  I tend to twirl around in a mess that somehow manages to pull it all together when I get to work.  At work, I take all the organized energy I haven't been using and apply it at a frantic rate that leaves others stressed out by spending time around me.  Way to go!
  • Critical
  • Serious
  • Scholarly
    • I just started a blog that is about reading nonfiction so I guess I can't argue with this one
  • Goal Oriented
  • High Achieving (if you set goals...this is the result, come on)
  • Self-Sacrificing (oh boy, I am a pleaser)
  • Supporter of law and order (I'll share a story about this one)
  • Loyal
Luckily for me, most of my traits are pretty good.  They just mean I have a tendency to want to follow the rules and not complain.  It also means I rarely say "too much" or ask for help from anyone outside my parents.  So the key to not being so much a pleaser...or to become a happier pleaser is to speak up.  It is ok for me to say "I can't do that" or to expect to be treated fairly.  I am allowed to have high expectations for other people (as long as they are reasonably)

Overall, I definitely recommend this book.  It is a fun read and it does make you think about yourself in a new way.  Let me know if you think you are a pleaser and how you are fixing that :)

Happy Reading!

Leman, Kevin. The Pleasers: Women Who Can't Say No and the Men Who Control Them. F.H. Revell Co., 1995.