Guest Posts, Girl Power: You Are Enough, Women, Women are Enough

Together We Grew

June 20, 2016

By Kimberly Valzania

Hi ladies, women, girls. Listen up.

I know you.

I know that some of you have been abused your whole life, whether you know it or not.  Whether it was subtle and under the radar, or straight up violent. Abused in ways that you can talk about and ways that you can not. Because you don’t remember. Or because you do.

I know you’ve been harassed. I know that over the years you’ve been told what you can and can not do. What you are allowed to do.  You’ve been told by men and other women, too.  And you’ve even been lectured by yourself. You’ve second-guessed your decisions because of how other people feel.

You’ve been told you are too strong, too big. Or you are too small, too skinny. Too jiggly.

You’re too bossy, too bitchy. Too direct, too blunt. Too polite. Too vague. Too emotional. Too wishy-washy. You’re too demure, too quiet. You’re too loud. You’ve been told to tone yourself down at bit. Too much. Not enough.

Slut, whore, angel, girl next-door.

Recently, the Connecticut Huskies Women’s Basketball team had to defend being really good. In fact, they were told that they were too good, which, apparently, isn’t good for the sport. Isn’t being good the whole point?  Isn’t setting the bar ever higher the whole point? These women have been encouraged their whole lives to be stronger, better, faster, smarter, and to work harder. And now, after achieving something that men playing the same sport have never achieved, they’re just too good. And that’s bad. That’s the message, folks.

I know your struggle, your pain. I know how hard you have tried to do it all and be all of it.  To everybody. Be the mother. The wife. The sister, the daughter. The aunt.  The provider. The worker, the chef, the tutor, the friend, the house-cleaner, the chauffeur, the gardener, the psychologist.  I know how you have worried and worried some more about all of it. I know you’ve had sleepless nights.  I know that you have put yourself on the back burner over and over again. I know that you have rarely put yourself first. Because when you do, something goes awry and you end up paying for it.

I know how fucking hard that is.  I know you’ve been offended, and you’ve had to defend. You’ve been teased. The comments and all the suggestions on how to improve. All the woulds and “could ya’s” and shoulds.

I know you’ve had to be a warrior, and you’ve also had to muffle your cries. I know how your tears have fallen on deaf ears. You’ve been both fierce and timid. I know you’ve had hide your pain sometimes. I know how often you have pretended.

I know you’ve been told that what you are wearing is too tight, too young. I know you’ve been told to stop eating, but for God’s sake, would you please eat something?

I know about no.

I know you’ve been scolded. You’ve been handed some rules about your body. I know that other people, people who fear and people who condemn, people who claim to be God-like and yet condone and exacerbate violence, are protected by their right to free speech, but yet you are not allowed to govern your own vagina or your uterus.

I know about being afraid.

I know you have felt alone. And damaged. I know that you’ve looked for love in all the wrong places.  You’ve looked for it in bars, in bottles, and on your plate.

I know that sometimes when you were invited to friends’ houses you envied and marveled at what they had. I know you still do this sometimes. You envy and you covet and you marvel.

I know how much you have fought with your mother. I know how much you have fought with your daughter.  I know how much your words have hurt each other because your way isn’t the best way and neither is hers and she doesn’t know everything and neither do you. We are all still learning about ourselves – clawing our way to the surface.

And I know how hard it was for you to run that damn mile in gym class. I know you were embarrassed. You felt clumsy because your breasts were too big for a 6th grader.

I know you were flustered when the pervy science teacher made comments about your breasts in the hallways when you were a freshman in high school. I know you didn’t know who to talk to. I know how much it bothered you because it triggered your memory of all the weird feelings you blocked for years over what what happened to you when you were little. I know why and when and how you started to eat too much.

I know you lied about how happy you were. And I know that some of the stuff you did was just to get attention. I understand your fear. I understand your insecurity. I understand the messy parts of your life. I know you’ve been hurt. Teased. Denied.

We hurt from deep to the bone cuts. In ways that bubble up and fester. In ways that pour out. In ways that erupt in rage – like a volcano, like a storm. In ways that spew from our souls.  For it’s our soul that is the most bruised, and it’s our soul that must heal.

I know you. Like me, you grew anyway.  Like a wildflower pushing up through a choking, concrete crack on a dirty sidewalk, you grew. A sidewalk endlessly sand-blasted, jack-hammered, and tread upon. Pissed upon, spit upon, even. Stifled and under-nourished, you still grew. You set your face to the sun, you reached out and up, and you grew. You grew despite what they said, despite what they told you, despite what you told yourself. In the face of all the not enough’s, and all the too’s, together, we grew.

Kimberly Valzania practices mindful gratefulness. She is creatively driven to write about and share her personal experience and opinion on weight loss, fitness, life changes, adventures in parenting, day-to-day triumphs (and failures), and the truth-seeking struggle of simply being human. As words tumble out, they are sorted into cohesive piles and delivered via poetry and short essays. She knows that life is indeed a journey, and that precious moments appear like magic when you surrender, hold hands, and fearlessly fling yourself into the great, wide, open. You can read more at her website.

12109010_10153307028458406_4053769942114712730_n

Join Jen Pastiloff in Tuscany Sep 17-24, 2016. There are 5 spaces left. This will be her only international retreat in 2016 and is her favorite retreat of the year. Email barbara@jenniferpastiloff.com asap. More info here. Must email first to sign up.

 

Join founder Jen Pastiloff for a weekend retreat at Kripalu Center in Western Massachusetts Feb 19-21, 2016. Get ready to connect to your joy, manifest the life of your dreams, and tell the truth about who you are. This program is an excavation of the self, a deep and fun journey into questions such as: If I wasn’t afraid, what would I do? Who would I be if no one told me who I was? Jennifer Pastiloff, creator of Manifestation Yoga and author of the forthcoming Girl Power: You Are Enough, invites you beyond your comfort zone to explore what it means to be creative, human, and free—through writing, asana, and maybe a dance party or two! Jennifer’s focus is less on yoga postures and more on diving into life in all its unpredictable, messy beauty. Note Bring a journal, an open heart, and a sense of humor. Click the photo to sign up.

 

You Might Also Like

No Comments

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.