I don't make excuses for myself. I try to own up to my actions and take responsibility for them. I understand it's different as a child than as an adult... I don't think it's a self esteem issue it's just me taking responsibility for how I have behaved and what I have done rather than trying to blame others or pass it off to someone else. I really try not to do that because in the end my actions are no one's fault but my own.
Your sense of responsibility is commendable. I just was trying to ensure that you weren't berating yourself unfairly. Sometimes we are not kind enough to ourselves.
I can't say exactly where it comes from but as far back as I can remember I was always misbehaving.
Okay, upstart child. A lot of children grow up in this fashion of misbehavior. My SO did. He has learned over time to cope with his mistakes and became a better person through his individual challenges in changing his behavior and thinking. Children are children are children. I don't believe in "bad seeds."
The accident happened when I was 10 and I know I got worse after that but I can't say if it was the trauma or it was just part of growing up and becoming an adolescent.
I was always
so angry and confused by my thoughts and behaviors and always being told from every environment and source that adolescent girls are just f*cking nuts. I was depressed, suicidal, otherwise self-destructive, am was exhibiting a lot of symptoms that I now understand as products of my history. But I never spoke up during that period because I was just a girl approaching my teen years. My pain seemed about as notable as a cough on a subway. Meanwhile I allowed myself to waste away in my issues because I was being told how normal it was.
They put me in special ed because of my behavior problems, and it just kept getting worse. My family and teachers and counselors and social workers told me I was headed towards prison if I didn't change.
They put you in special ed... because of behavioral problems. This must have been frustrating for you. A friend of mine with high-functioning autism was sent to special ed. Within his first year of college he had started his own non-profit and was profiled in prestigious publications for his organization. The way he was labeled as a problem in school was unfair and unwarranted. I personally think that public schools with special ed can be really harmful, even to children who have learning differences that greatly impair their scholastic performance, so I am bias in thinking this must have been a terrible ordeal for you.
Well I guess I did change because I am not in prison. But I don't consciously know how I changed I guess it was a gradual thing so I can't really commend myself for it.
Change seems to very rarely happen over night and is not always a product of constant diligence but a slowly adapting perception and understanding. Most change seems to be insidious. That does not mean you don't deserve credit. It seems unfair to take responsibility for your bad behaviors but not for your accomplishments over time.
Especially ones relating to the accident which I know I still have not explained but I am really just afraid to on a public forum like this where everyone can see it.
This is a big step, disclosing on a public forum. No one will judge you for explaining and divulging in your own time and at the level of your personal comfort and limits. Putting your experience out in the world in such an accessible place is intimidating and is not a light task. I appreciate what you have shared about yourself thus far on the forum. You are a valued participant of the community no matter the extent of your sharing.
But I know I have a lot of guilt and responsibility in that situation too and sometimes it is just so overwhelming that I wonder why I am still alive when I know I don't deserve to be.
! You are worrying me, Redfox. You deserve to be alive, loved, appreciated, and happy. I appreciate that you are here today.