Showing posts with label school. Show all posts
Showing posts with label school. Show all posts

Thursday, August 2, 2018

Not Quite a "But"-erfly


Following that difficult first few days back at school, I had a reprieve.  I was headed to Annapolis for a meeting at our State Association office for a group with which I was involved. It was likely that the meeting would take most of the day, so I wasn’t at my school.  Now and then, these kinds of days are needed by the local, state, or national association, in order for members like myself to continue the work of the organization.

I was glad I didn’t have to see people at school after feeling so raw the day before. Instead, I got to see educators at work in a different way. It oddly offered me a semblance of normality even though a few of them knew what had happened. A few people reached out and shared with me their thoughts and support, and we got started with the work at hand. It was perfectly distracting, and I was incredibly glad to be distracted in such a productive way.

As I drove home after the meeting, I thought about the past few days, about how many people had reached out, and were continuing to do so now that there were five posts up. Like much of what had been said, people shared kind sentiments, and wished me well… mostly. The sheer volume of comments and readership was surprising to me, as was the overall support. But then again, when thousands of people knew a secret about you, I suppose you’re bound to get some response...

My father had also reached out via text, which came as groups of multiple texts received in rapid fire succession, but were intended to be singular messages. For whatever reason, since he’s older and not great with technology, I thought he might not have access to the blog.

I was mistaken.

Through some of his texts, I was informed that a “mutual friend” was sending the posts to him when they were published each day.

On that day, he was not just offering his support, but also specific responses to what I was writing on the blog, namely his explanation for his reaction the night I confronted him about my adoption and what “actually” happened. He explained that he refrained from crying as we spoke because I asked him to. Then he fled the restaurant because he was so overcome with emotion, and, upon arrival at home, he burst into tears, and prayed to God about what had happened.

The subtext, at least as I read it: I’m sure you were hurt in finding out you were adopted. But I was hurting too! You just didn’t see it. It happened, really! Just like all the crazy details about your adoption!

The sub-subtext: Yes, what happened was bad. But, if you could look past all the pain, the hurt, the lies, and focus on what I was, and am still, feeling, that would be great, because I’m the real victim here.

Because of this, part of me appreciated that my thoughts were being shared with him, so that I didn’t have to reach out. I just didn’t have the energy. However, part of me was also annoyed, as irrational as it might have been, because who was betraying me that way?

Ok. I know it’s not a betrayal. However, anyone who was reading my posts daily, then choosing to find a way to get them to my father, to me, is going a bit out of their way to stir a pot that they have no involvement in.

Except they were and are involved. Because everyone who knew about my adoption was involved, even if they were just bystanders, even if they wanted to tell me. They’re still involved in the industrial sized net of lies my parents had created.  Some because they wanted to protect and support me, and some because they want to protect and support my father, yet, interestingly enough, none wanted to protect and support my mother. Granted, she is a convenient scapegoat, since she’s out of the country and not speaking to anyone at the moment.

So, it should come as no big surprise when I got a few different messages on my way home from Annapolis from people who felt inclined to reach out… you know, to offer a different perspective.

Again, in retrospect, I realize that these messages were sent with genuine kindness and concern for me. However, that concern in some cases was overshadowed by the distinct concern for my father.  These people understood that the secret about my origins is painful, for me, for my parents, even for them, because they felt unable to have told me. Reflective, two-years-later-me understands this now.

Emotional, in-the-moment me, on the other hand, reacted rather violently to these messages which I read after my father’s texts. I didn’t want to hear about support for my father, or my mother, who both lied to me for 33 years. Unfortunately for these people, and for myself, because I read my father’s texts first, the lens which all other messages were filtered through was less than flattering, as that lens from my father was about how things “really” happened, I just didn’t see it (just like so much of my life, apparently).

I was driving and definitely started shouting to myself in my car; it must have been either entertaining or terrifying to those driving next to me. No matter. They got a free show on the ride home.

No one said anything specifically hurtful; honestly, people were quite supportive. However, a few included phrases like “I’m sure you’re hurting right now, but…” and “think how your dad is feeling.” Because of the added qualifiers to offer exception to my pain in addition to those who mentioned my father shattered my superego and left my id in charge.

Why, you ask? Because none of them were adopted. Shocking, I know. It’s not really that often that you find people who have an exact match for your unexpected difficulties, which is why I attempted to be reasonable and not require that they recently found out they were adopted—after 33 years. The one strike was enough.

This is another example, for those who might be wondering, of my slow acceptance of the ride to crazy-town that I hoped was a return trip. First the paranoia had developed, at my friend’s wedding and at work. Next, the fear took hold, that nothing would be normal again.  Now the blind accusatory anger blossomed, directed at people who wanted to offer me their concern but happened to have done so after I’d been contacted by my father.

How ironic that, as an English teacher, I was getting a literal lesson on how important context is to a given situation.

In looking back though, I learned an important life-lesson—if you are offering support to someone going through a difficult time, never, EVER, use the word “but” in any sentence, in any way. Anything before a “but” is, ultimately, a lie in the moment. And, when used in a difficult situation, it could be interpreted that there’s at least one way the person being spoken to has a reaction that is wrong. Not only is that not true, but it’s not fair in any way, especially when people are raw from newly discovered emotional turmoil.

But, I must capture this for you all—that when you read messages that have the “buts” and the “think of how your father is feeling” it puts you on the defensive, in every way, especially when you feel as if everyone is looking at your every move, judging and/or laughing at you.

Suddenly, at your most basic level, it’s you verses them.

And when you realize that it’s only you against thousands of them, there’s either fight or flight.

I have apparently become a flighty fighter. I began to simply shut down, and stopped responding to people, even though they were doing their best, or they were reaching out to see how I was doing.

In retrospect, I’m glad I didn’t say much to anyone, mainly because I know now I didn’t say anything that I regret.

Unfortunately, this meant that I stopped speaking or writing at all for a while, as you can see from the general gap in posts for the majority of the past two years. I will also remind you that as this is the 20th post, I was writing posts far past the events in which they were happening. The good of this allowed me to process, somewhat, what I was experiencing, and not just digitally blurting stream-of-consciousness style on the page. However, this also means that other things were happening to impact me in real time, well beyond the events about which I was writing. We will get to these moments shortly.

With all of those interactions, messages, and texts from people, both in person and online, my energy level, much like my life and situation, felt like it was draining away ten times faster than I could replenish it. Additionally, finding ways to articulate how I was feeling to people was becoming, and has continued to be, a challenge since the revelation of my adoption, though it’s gotten much easier now. I began to descend into the muck of the depression, and for this reason, it became more and more difficult to write. I felt like I was facing multiple fronts at once, while attempting to maintain my daily life and work functions.

Something had to give. It ended up being my creative outlet, which was unfortunate, but it also allowed me to ever-so-slightly retreat into an imagined bubble.

So, now, I’m cracking my self-imposed shell and emerging as someone who is ready to examine and discuss what I experienced. OK, so it’s too trite to say that I’m a butterfly now. I haven’t evolved enough for that yet. But, I feel that I’m at least out of the chrysalis. And for now, that’s enough.

Monday, January 23, 2017

First Day of School

In the process of writing and publishing, then traveling for the weekend for a wedding, and everything generally moving at the speed of light, it hadn’t occurred to me that my co-workers, many of whom are also friends on social media, would see and be reading my posts.

            I feel that it’s important to reiterate that I’m an extrovert by nature, and not afraid of people or public situations. Given my union activism, it would prove difficult to speak to officials and lobby for education if I were. I will often read a situation before responding, but when I do, I tend to speak my mind—about educational issues.

As for my personal life, and the events that occur outside of school, I don’t share much with people I only consider colleagues. In terms of my personal life, I prefer to be well into the shadows, out of the line of sight. Given the past few years, and all the awkwardness with my mom and dad’s divorce, then the insanity with my mother’s love life, a painful breakup with an ex last year for me, I don’t feel the need to share with everyone what’s going on with me for good reason.

Additionally, there have been times when at the lunch table where conversations have drifted toward questions about LGBTQ+ issues, and, as the resident member of that community, I’m the default spokesperson. While there have been moments of genuine interest or concern for me, I’ve also seen people literally shut off, turn away, or disengage when I speak about what it’s like to be gay. Or when I talk about going on a date. Or, if I speak about anything that involves something which makes them uncomfortable, which, as it turns out, is a large swath of my personal life.

That judgement is why I don’t love talking about my personal life or areas that overlap with my personal life with people with whom I am not close.

            Therefore, walking into school Monday was difficult. Again, I struggled with the idea that people were staring at me. But, the students didn’t know what was going on. And I walked into my room without anyone around. I was being paranoid.

            Except this time I wasn’t.

            I started my morning routine and walked into the teacher’s planning area. It felt as if everyone who was there stopped what they were doing and started staring at me. Some weren’t. But some were.

            And then began the conversations...

“Oh, I read your blog…”

“That’s so crazy!”

“What’s going on? What blog?”

So, first thing on Monday morning, I had to recount everything I knew about my current situation with work colleagues I largely don’t see outside of the building once I leave for the day.

It would be rude of me not to acknowledge that everyone who spoke to me mostly did so in a way that shared concern for my situation, and not entirely out of probing for lurid details about my life. Mostly.

Like much of this experience, knowing that people cared was comforting, even if I did have to articulate my pain a few hundred times. Ok. It wasn’t a hundred—it just felt like it.

At least I wasn’t entirely crazy for thinking people were looking at me anymore.

Getting into my typical daily routine was also helpful, and teaching was a welcoming distraction. Students would learn, and I would teach them, and that part of my life would progress as normal.

And then lunch came.

I was dreading it. Stuck in close-quarters, with no escape from people who would want to talk about it. Except, no one did, as the people I eat lunch with who I’m also connected to on social media were absent that day.  No one knew…yet. Small mercies.

I made it through the day. It was going to be ok.

Day two had fewer comments from co-workers, and I began to feel that I would be able to revert to some sense of normalcy.

Until I got to lunch.

            I walked in and saw a mostly full table, which meant everyone who typically came to eat lunch was present. I heated up my food in the microwave, and sat down. I was taking my first bite when my coworkers finished speaking about something. And then it began.

            “Jonathan… Wow. Just wow. How crazy to be going through all of this!”

            Now, more than ever, it felt as if a spotlight had zeroed in on me.  There was nowhere to hide, no corner to slink into.

            “Uh… Yeah. It’s all pretty crazy.”

            There’s no way I didn’t look like a deer in headlights; I certainly felt like one.

            So, naturally, those who I’m not connected to via social media started asking the obvious question… What’s up?

            Such a little question. Yet, obviously so loaded.

            I couldn’t ignore it, so I did what I’ve been doing in all of this—I met it head on and began to explain.

            Everyone was naturally dumbfounded and offered their support and concern, but I’ve never felt more naked or exposed in my life. To not only have colleagues know something so intimate about you, but to be placed in a precarious position by being prompted to tell them—it was beyond difficult.

I was still wrapping my head around the insanity of my situation, so to try to casually discuss my life with people I solely see within the confines of the school building, and then act calm, cavalier even, about my adoption was almost more than I could handle. I wanted to scream at them, to lash out, but that’s not fair.

Then again, what part of this process has been fair?

I would like to again point out that I know that my co-workers are, overall, kind and are sympathetic to my situation. These people, especially, were shocked and genuinely amazed at what I’d discovered.  I do not blame anyone for their desire to know about my situation, given that I’m also publishing it online. I’m continually reminded about how many people are showing caring, at least in their way. However, this lunch still taught/reminded me of two things.

First, I am not someone who enjoys pity. I enjoy comfort, or support, or sympathy, or empathy to something I’m going through. I do not enjoy having someone look at me and, with a slight smarminess, ask me “How’s it going?” knowing full-well that nothing for me is going well, and implying that everything for the person asking is fantastic. It’s rude and unkind. Every one of us has struggles; some people’s struggles just are bigger than yours some days. It doesn’t mean that you are above anyone else because tomorrow might be the day your karma is checked.

Second, I have also learned to be careful about when I ask anyone about something personal, lest I inadvertently overwhelm or hurt them with my attempt to show concern. Compassion, as well as tact, I continue to find, are things in short supply these days, and are often overlooked because of good intentions to offer sympathy, whether real or feigned.

After I divulged my story, I inhaled my lunch (gotta love the 25 minute lunch breaks of a teacher, especially when in this case I was left with about ten…), and returned to class, my fears revived that everyone was staring at the new adoptee, because after that spotlight session, they were.

A few deep breaths, and I reminded myself….

I’m fine.  It’s fine. Everything’s fine.

Maybe one day soon, I won’t just have to pretend that this mantra was true.