I have been hiding from this blog. I have been scared to share this because I
wanted and wished for so much more than has been happening lately. I know with my past personal focus and great
hope, I found Crush. Now, I have to work
on all of the other areas of my life that require deep concentration.
I am horrible at transitioning and I am still processing a
bunch of change. Lately, I have been
enjoying my time here in Charleston. But, do I love it? I actually don’t. I like it very much, but I am excited about
moving to a smaller place where I can hopefully feel a bit more a part of
things. My feelings about Charleston
have been hard for me to accept and it has been a bit of a let down. Embracing the
reality of life versus what I imagined it would be is a tough lesson for me to
muddle through. I take everything hard
and extra personally. I am over feeling
attacked and like a victim at every turn.
I struggle with being happy.
I don’t always feel good about myself.
Recently, I have accepted that I am highly sensitive. It is just the essence of who I am. I don’t see the world the same way most
people do and I am trying to use my fragility as a tool to help me be a better
person. I have always reasoned that I
have an issue with being too sensitive. It wasn’t until I ventured into the
raging waters of owning my own business (and broke up with Awful and then had a
breakdown) that I truly accepted how thin my skin is. This is an area that has been holding me back
my entire life and I am sick of not being able to be a present and active part
of this world because I am so afraid of not being liked.
As a wedding planner, one of the main things I have to face is
blame. Clients want to blame vendors, vendors want to blame clients,
brides/grooms want to blame their in-laws and in-laws want to blame their child
for putting them in a situation that they often would like to stay out of. The cycle of blame continues through families
like a raging forest fire until it gets to me. When all of the blame has been shifted and
allocated and there is still a bit left, it becomes my problem. I once got blamed for the City of Chicago
doing construction five blocks away from a host hotel. The client thought I should have told them
that there was construction “in the area” because they wanted to take their
families on a walk and the streets “didn’t look nice.” Because of the construction, they threatened
not to pay me. This shit is real.
I get exhausted all over again just thinking about how I once
let myself be roped into madness. As a
way to appease the crazy, I almost always bended over backwards and did not
keep my limits. I wasted thousands (like
$20,000 at my last accurate count, thank you taxes) of dollars paying for blame
(mostly created by clients) that I didn’t create. This included such shenanigans
as clients contracting vendors independently of me (like finding the vendor
themselves and wanting to use this person/company, often because of a low
price) and paying a deposit directly to the vendors and then hating the initial
product (photography and hair and makeup often come to mind) and looking at me
to fix it. Hard to admit, but sometimes
the vendors wouldn’t return the money and I would pay the client out of my own
pocket to look like the client got their way.
I just wanted my clients happy and I sometimes needed peace. There often wasn’t enough time in my day to debate
$500.00 relentlessly and listen to empty threats from both parties, so I paid it to shut everyone up. I created little
monsters by not sharing reality. I made my
clients think the impossible was possible.
I just didn’t have the balls to confront things head on when they were
small and then I let the avalanche of missteps bury me whole. I would grow resentful of clients I felt
taken advantage of and it showed. When I
got wind of bad client practices (they exist just like how bad business owner
practices do, it is all a 2 way street) I didn’t want to call the client and have the tough conversation
of ending our contract and parting ways.
I waited for them to call me out on something and then I folded time and
again. I people pleased my way back in,
even when I wanted out. The few epic clients disasters that happened to me….often I had a hand in creating because I didn't cut the cord when the cray first came into light. Where was my common sense? My pride?
My integrity? My ability to stick up for what is right and just and sane?
This has been super hard for me to come to terms with and it
was a terrible and maddening way to do business. I WAS NOT THINKING CLEARLY OBVIOUSLY. Please know that I have changed every single
detail in the way I now do business and I updated it all: business plan,
contracts and most importantly how I charge and collect payment. I realize that creating limits brings
respect. I have to take my business seriously and practice a strict standard of practices without exceptions or it will never work.
Here I am complaining about Charleston, my sensitivity
and my business. What do they all have
in common? I feel like a failure. I feel like I don’t have what it takes to be
the person I should be. I live in fear
of the few people I should have never gotten involved with, including
Awful. I am sick of hiding out, but I am also terrified to put myself out there again.
I guess I wanted to tell you how AMAZING life is here in
Charleston. How I am popular, thin and
wanted. How getting a job has been easy. Aside from my incredible relationship with my
man, things here haven’t been a cakewalk.
I have few friends and all of the “let’s get togethers” never turn into
anything more than unanswered emails and texts.
I feel like a huge outsider. Job
rejection is my norm. I have lost over
20 pounds, but I still struggle with binging (even if I don’t do it much
anymore, the compulsion to do it is a daily battle) and I still can’t get into my
pre-Awful clothes although I am getting closer. I am dragging my feet to get back
to planning because I am scared, even though I know I am good at it. Even though I know that the mistakes I made,
I mostly brought on to myself for not being stronger. I give too many people
too much power over me. I agree to
costly things just to feel accepted and wanted and don’t even realize I am
being used, until it has already happened. I did this again only a few months ago and it was a costly and annoying mistake. I vowed to myself that this was the LAST time. I take a lot more time than most to process important decisions and if I feel pressure, it is because I am being pressured. I should always trust my instincts.
I WILL learn to deal with the sensitivity. I have dealt with so many other struggles
these last few years: my honesty, my happiness, my food addiction, emotional abuse
and being true to myself. Putting
yourself back together isn’t instant. I
want to live my life on a deeper level than most and I am learning that I hold
myself to a different standard, too. All
part of the sensitivity cycle.
I thought that everything would be perfect when I met the
man for me, just like how I used to think that being thin was the answer to all
of my problems. Life is so much more
than a perfect engagement ring (I LOVE mine, but I would have been fine without
it) and single digit clothing. I guess that when you finally find the prince
you have always been searching for that you forget that life isn’t really all a
fairy-tale. Some things are harder than
others.
Everything is not okay and that is okay. No one is judging me. Are they? No one thinks about me as much as I imagine
they do. I know this. I want to find the balance
between love, happiness, personal fulfillment and honesty. I need to change a bit more to get there and
I don’t know how exactly. But, let’s
start with really sharing my life again, all of the good and all of the bad.
Here goes…..