Given the title of my blog, I feel compelled to make a confession. It’s more than I feel comfortable “putting out there” but, I’ve also come to learn that what’s even harder than being honest with others, is being honest with yourself…
I do, and have for most of my life, suffer from a lot of inadequacy issues. For as long as I can remember, I always felt like I wasn’t enough…tall enough, pretty enough, smart enough, funny enough, disciplined enough, righteous enough…whatever it is, my sense of falling short has been overwhelming at times. I’m not entirely sure where this comes from but, I’m willing to bet that it’s a post for another time!
I remember being a little girl and thinking to myself that if I was just a little bit better at math or brushed my teeth a minute longer each day…then I would be an even better daughter and give people even less reason to be upset or disappointed in me. I never wanted to be a burden on anyone or the cause of any grief and somehow, I had convinced myself that being more of “something” would keep that from happening. It never did.
In my last year of university, I shared a house with three other girls. All of us were really experiencing very different times in our lives and by the hand of God, we were all brought together to share those experiences under a common roof. Amanda was just coming out of a divorce, Heidi was starting her first year of university, I was finishing my last year and Jane was a silent witness to it all from her top floor bedroom. I haven’t spoken to any of these girls since that year in our house but, the lingering memory of those eight months has stayed with me for a long time. It was meeting Heidi that really brought those feelings of inadequacy to forefront of my mind and forced a reality upon me that I had never seen before.
Heidi was perfect. She was perfect in as much a way as an imperfect person could be in my eyes. She was beautiful, brilliant, charming, eloquent, poetic, mysterious, extremely devout and every where she went, she left a trail of eyes gazing over their shoulders at her. Men tripped over themselves to talk to her and when they finally did, they stumbled over their words for lack of proper cognitive functioning that often occurred around her. Everyone else, myself included, simply adored her and wanted nothing more than to be in her presence. She walked into a room and everything was suddenly brighter. One night, the two of us were out together and we ran into a friend of mine downtown. He too was with another friend and when he introduced us, he said “this is Heidi…and this is Heidi’s friend”. And he was right. That moment summed up how I often felt around Heidi. I wasn’t really me anymore. Instead, I was someone who constantly fell short of being comparable to her. In all my time of feeling mediocre, it had only ever been a relative feeling. I had not yet learned the art of comparison and up until then, it never occurred to me that for as long as I lived, there were certain people that I would never be as good as.
Before I go any further though, please let me make one thing very clear…nothing that Heidi ever did made me feel this way. She was never manipulative or arrogant. In fact, she was extremely humble and seemed completely oblivious to the spell that she cast on everyone she met. If anything, this made her all the more wonderful. All she ever did was be her self. It nearly drove me mad when I thought about how inadequate I would feel standing next to her. I often used to borrow her clothes or listen to her favourite music in hopes that somehow, this would make me more like her. One evening, when we were getting ready to go out, she looked at me and said “each day, you become more and more like me”! We all had a good laugh but deep down, I ached at knowing that I would never be enough like her. The truth was that not only was she perfect but, she was perfect in every way that I wasn’t. I would never be 5’10” and blonde. I would never have her discipline or self-awareness that constantly compelled her to be a better person. She knew English literature the way most of us know the ABCs and while she had the gift of grace…I was more like a bull in a china shop. I would never be able to be as eloquent on paper as she was and I would never have the perfect, charming smile like hers. I would never possess her amazing sense of style or wear red lipstick like her and frankly…it broke my heart.
After our time together was over, she moved away and we seldom kept in touch. In some ways, it was easier for me because it took me a long time to get over having lived in her shadow. She was never anything but a great friend to me and I wanted nothing more than to understand why I could never be as good as her. About a year ago though, I found her blog and just like that, I had a window into her life again. I would check it from time to time but, after my initial contact, it was clear that she didn’t really want to re-connect, so I kept a bit of distance.
Yesterday though, amidst the snow storm, there was a calm and silence to the day that left me with a bit of unexpected time on my hands. So I searched deep down into the brave part of my soul (believe me, it’s a small place!) and decided to see how Heidi really had been doing all this time. I read pieces of her blog dating all the way back to June of 2003 and watched her very eloquently describe the course of her life from being single and at school to getting married and most recently, the birth of her son, Jude. As I looked at the pages of her life and photographic evidence of it all, I kept asking myself if it was really the same person that I had known for that short time in our lives?? She was so grown up and yet, at the same time, I expected nothing less from her than the fairytale ending that she had created. It was beautiful.
I’ll admit that as I read her reflections of her life, I was confronted with those same feelings that I had many years ago. She was still all of those amazing qualities that I admired, longed for and even more so…she had grown into an even more refined version of herself. My inadequacies still haunt me, even now. What was shocking though was to read portions of her blog in which she expressed her own feelings of inadequacy. How was this possible?? How could she…how could Heidi…this woman that was larger than life, ever feel inadequate about anything?? Didn’t she know what people saw when they looked at her?? Didn’t she know what I saw when I looked at her??
I remember being at Blessed Sacrament a couple of months ago and listening to Father Joe talk about the “obvious” sins that we are confronted with on a daily basis…pride, envy, jealousy. He brought up the intriguing question of the “not-so-obvious” sins that we commit just as often, and sometimes more…the self-inflicted abuse of comparing ourselves to others. He said that we would seldom ever walk up to another person and tell them that they aren’t good enough but, some of us (guilty!) commit this sin on ourselves numerous times a day. Abuse is abuse, he tells me, whether it’s your self or someone else inflicting it. To undermine our own gifts is to take for granted what God gave us…it’s to not appreciate the 5’8” dark-haired temple that he gave my soul. I’ve thought about this a lot of late and realize that this self-abuse is perhaps one of my biggest sins as I seldom ever think twice about shrieking back in the shadows for lack of belief that I have reason to stand out. I’ve been okay with my mediocrity for the most part. I’ve accepted that I blend into the background very nicely and I’ve become accustom to it. What I never learned to accept though was being the paint-by-numbers that is hung next to the Van Gogh.
I understand and appreciate that our great Lord made us right down to our very last detail. And I appreciate that He also intended Heidi and I to share that space in our lives for reason pre-destined long before our meeting. I understand that He single handedly chose her to have those qualities but…He never had to live with her and He never had to look up at the shining light that always radiated from her and feel like your flame was a mere spark in comparison.
I’m sure that there is wisdom and a lesson to be had in all of this one day. I’m sure that there is great knowledge and understanding to come of this internal challenge one day…but I also know that today…is not that day.