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J_'s avatar

Hello me from the past. Being judgemental as shit is a beautiful asset when channelled correctly because here's what you're good at: INSTINCTIVE PATTERN RECOGNITION. In a whole room you singled out that one misaligned tile? You don't like that person's relationship just because UGH? This work project is confusing and stupid but you can't say exactly why? It's all the same talent. How could Ask Polly be such a sensation if not for the whip-smart connection of patterns?

Sometimes I feel like this is less like owning a machete and more like owning a swarm of wasps. Sure they'll attack on sight, but those lil fuckers will also spread out and map the whole area for picnics and dickheads before you even know what's happening. Don't you think that's useful information to have? What a shame that we aren't taught to speak insect by our parents.

What I couldn't recognise when I was younger was that my gut instinct was flying miles ahead of my logic at all times, but emotion bad, logic is the only thing that counts right? So I walked into all sorts of issues simply because I didn't respect my initial knee-jerk reactions enough to sit with them until they could be formulated into sensible words. I'm pushing 40 and still tend to walk around reacting to the world like a toddler "I like this! And I like this! This sucks I hate it! This is nice!" but really that's just my instincts reconning the landscape so my consciousness can figure out the details of what I'm reacting to.

The point is, I have another example of a finely honed judgemental machete in action:

I get paid a lot to review incredibly complex scientific documents with the exact dumb level of inner monologue I have previously described. If something pisses me off there's *always* a perfectly good reason I can eventually turn into sensible feedback, like missing info or bad logic. I still can't believe how fast and accurate my stupid knee-jerk judgement is sometimes, but there it is.

Your worst qualities are also your best.

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PrettyLady_Designer's avatar

Also me from the past. The damage our parents did to us by convincing us we are unlovable boils down to this: we think we are responsible for how people treat us. And we believe that if we could somehow BE BETTER, they would be nicer to us than they are.

It's like auto-inflicted voodoo. "This guy was a rude jackass to me. What's the Perfect Response which will make him feel simultaneously understood and remorseful, and want to apologize sweetly with a dozen ombre roses and tickets to a jazz festival?"

Then when our perfectly calculated response produces no jazz tickets, we are all Incandescent Rage. Way out of proportion to the amount of energy we invested in that doofus.

As Heather says, the way out is to love and revel in every characteristic that our misguided progenitors deplored. But first, we have to grieve.

Deciding to grieve can be hard and scary, because it requires admitting that we've been unjustly hurt. That we didn't have control over how we were treated. That those who were supposed to love us, didn't. That we didn't get what we needed.

But grieving is the first step toward healing. Letting it out drains the pustulating wound that's stabbing us from within.

And when we let grief move through us, it opens up the space for love and joy as well.

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