What It Means To Be Seen.

I have struggled with other people’s assumptions my entire life.

I remember being in the principal’s office at the public school we were zoned for when we lived in the country, and her leaning in and asking me “Are you an only child?”

I was in her office because a boy had run up to me and grabbed me between my legs when our Spanish teacher was out of the room. I was so embarrassed — it had been a dare, I think, from the way his friends were laughing — and would never have spoken a word about it to our teacher. But my friend was appalled and dragged me to the principal and now there I was, sitting in front of her, mortified and sweating and wishing I wouldn’t have let my friend shove me into her office.

“Are you an only child?” She asked me again.

“Yes.”

“Well, that explains it. You’re probably spoiled.”

The number of siblings I did or did not have had nothing to do with the fact that I was minding my own business, sitting on a windowsill talking about whatever 5th grade girls talk about, when someone shoved his hand in a place it never should have gone. But I was a white girl who was dressed nicely and got good grades, and now it was out that I was also an only child too, with parents who worked in the city.

HOW DARE I.

This is when my shame began: the apologetic feeling. The I’m sorry for being who I am. The let me work really hard to make you feel okay about dealing with me.

I have spent almost my entire life dealing with a compulsive need to prove to others that I’m not an airhead because I smile a lot. I’M JUST A HAPPY PERSON, DAMN IT.

I have worked tirelessly for far too long to prove that I’m not bitchy because I’m a confident woman, that I’m not racist because I happen to be white, that I’m not closed-minded because I was raised in a Conservative Christian bubble, and that I’m not judgy because my house is clean.

I’ve spent my life feeling afraid of offending others with my presence, even when they were the ones offending me.

Fuck. That. Noise.

I don’t want to apologize anymore and I don’t feel like I have to, because I have experienced the elation of being immersed in a situation where everyone is just as screwed up and weird and talented as I am and it was AMAZING. It was such a moving experience to go to the Blog U Conference last weekend and feel completely accepted into a group of people who are not at all like me, but yet somehow completely like me.

We swept the Notre Dame of Maryland University campus with a quirky, maladjusted wave of awesomeness. The nuns probably all rolled over in their graves or crossed their chests or something.

I can’t wait to go back.

Somehow these people who I have never met in real life know and understand me better than people who have known me for 35 years. I don’t know how or why and I don’t understand any of it, but apparently this is what it feels like when you find your people.

This is what it feels like to not have to explain or apologize for being yourself.

This is what it feels like to be seen.

Being seen for who you are.

Before the “Middle School To The Max” party.

I never would have had this experience without the support of my amazing husband, who raised the funds for me to go, and without the support of my bomb ass friends and family who keep pushing me, reading my work, encouraging me and telling me I need to shut up and stop apologizing for the love of holy hot dog buns.

Go find your people.

It is so, so worth the wait.

(If you liked this post, then you NEED to follow me on Facebook and Twitter!)

38 thoughts on “What It Means To Be Seen.

  1. One of my regrets is not spending more time with YOU. Because you are such a bright spot in my Internets that I was so excited to meet you and the sensory overload had me bouncing all over the place like one of those crazy squirrels. Run-on sentence totally included.

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  2. The night before the conference I said to my husband, “I’m not afraid of going there alone, and I’m not afraid of rooming with someone, and I’m not afraid of talking to people or eating meals with them. I’m afraid of being invisible.” Isn’t that the worst feeling there is?

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  3. This post is awesome. I feel the SAME way. Been judged and been apologizing for things completely outside my control. You are a beautiful person and a fantastic writer. Wish I had been able to make it to BlogU.

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  4. Such an excellent post. This is exactly what I’ve found in my blogging friends and I’m glad you have too. I saw you fly past so many times this weekend and kept assuming we’d have a chance to meet. Now you have to come back next year!

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  5. I’m going next year. I mean it. I think this post just cemented my decision. I look forward to meeting you, Harmony, and you can beam that fantastic smile at me all day long!

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  6. Love it! I think a lot of us who “march to our own drum” struggle with finding our people. I found them when I spent 3 blissful years backpacking around the world. I knew immediately it was the right choice for me. Now as a stay at home mom I struggle with finding the same connection with people living in my suburban town. I still keep in touch with your soulmates I met around the world but I wish they were here! Guess I have to keep looking. Kudos to you for getting out there and taking risks!

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  7. Isn’t it amazing to feel closer to people on the internets and at BlogU than in real life? That part of this whole journey always fascinates me. So glad that you were seen and that I got to see you in person. I wish I’d said hi before the last day (I’m a dork). Also FUCK that principal! Asshat.

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  10. This post is awesome. I need to find my people, I just don’t know where to start looking. Ha! Keep writing. Keep being unapologetically you. I enjoy your posts a lot. 😊

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