We recently got your professional photo back, which was taken at your Taekwondo studio. It couldn’t have turned out any better, as a representation of who you are when you are in class.
It is undeniable that Taekwondo helps balance you out and bring out the best in you. The self-ordained discipline and goal-setting is so crucial to your psychological development right now.
So it made sense to me when you chose on your own, with no prompting from anyone else, to purposely not smile for your photo.
This photo is how you see yourself, as now, a green-striped yellow belt.
I’ll start by pointing out the obvious. This is 2022. Nobody reads blogs anymore. I know that.
And that very fact likely reveals how much time has passed between the version of myself I do not wish to remind anyone of (though ironically, that’s what I am doing here), and the now 40 year-old version of myself who is finally beginning to process the shame, fear, and anger that I didn’t realize has been here this whole time.
Would it be silly for me to apologize to everyone who knew me during the most challenging and darkest time of my life? I can if you need me to.
Because trust me- I don’t like that guy from a decade ago!
He came across as very self-righteous, eager to prove others wrong, and way too caught up in conspiracy theories.
At the time, I was Parents magazine’s official Daddy Blogger; a side hustle that lasted a solid 4 years. During that time, the plant-based trend was really picking up. So naturally, I found myself exploiting the fact I was a hard core vegan, in my blog posts. Sure, it helped my views. But my vegan lifestyle also served as an avatar to reveal my anger and confusion.
If it wasn’t me being a vegan, it would have been something else. My subconscious would have found an alter-ego to demonstrate what is completely obvious to me now:
I was not at peace. I was reaching.
I was reaching for the idea that I could be in control of… something.
Because during that time, I felt like my life was out of control.
My wife and I had moved from Nashville (where we had decent jobs) with our newborn son, back to my hometown in Alabama. Keep in mind, this was shortly following the Financial Crisis of 2008. And not knowing better, we moved there without securing jobs first.
Unlike now, where people my age are migrating back to their hometowns because so many of us are working remotely anyway, it proved impossible back then to find a decent job where I could support my wife and newborn son.
So after nine stormy months, we had to swallow what was left of our pride and ask for our old jobs back.
We moved to Nashville again, but not before our car broke down on the way up.
And of course, we had been living off our savings the whole time we were jobless in Alabama.
That means we returned to our life in Nashville, with no savings- and for me personally, very little dignity. Starting over.
I couldn’t have known it at the time, but I was very angry and was living in much fear; in addition to the shame I felt, for years following our move back to Nashville.
It was about four years ago that I began to wake up from the fog. The company I had been working for all those years shut down their branch where I worked, which forced me to find a new job.
That new job as a recruiter, where I still work today, would prove to be the best place I have ever worked. I became part of a team for the first time. I polished my leadership skills. I felt good about my life again, finally.
Subconsciously, I was beginning to find my inner peace again.
The biggest epiphany began to present itself a just few months ago, after I became inspired to earn my certification as an Enneagram coach.
I learned that I am an Enneagram 7. I am the optimist and the extrovert, out of the 9 Enneagram personalities.
The downside is, my specific fear as an Enneagram 7 is that my time is being wasted, so I constantly feel I have to keep myself busy all the time- and I have to feel like I’m being productive.
Otherwise, the anxiety kicks in. And I realized that the unsuccessful move to Alabama changed my Enneagram wing of a practical 6, to an aggressive and often angry 8.
I will say- it means I’m really good at my job: Convincing people what to do all day; thanks to my aggressive, energetic edge.
But outside of the character I play at work, it can be challenging for me to feel relaxed. Because I have this angry, anxious energy running through my veins.
For me, this is a year of focusing on mental health. I feel like a lot of people have been saying the same thing, here recently.
As an Enneagram 7, my “growth personality” is an Enneagram 5. In other words, the best version of myself is when I am a more analytical and balanced introvert.
Contrary to that is who I was a decade ago, the self-righteous vegan. That was me in my “stress personality”, which is an Enneagram 1, the Perfectionist. That was the worst version of me, on public display.
Thanks to my new insight, I am able to see progress begin.
As recent as… yesterday, actually… I actually began crying tears of sadness, anger, and shame; as I came to terms with the emotions I repressed for over a decade, from the move to Alabama not working out.
This past weekend, I joined what I am ultimately going to call a “Men’s Support Group”; some of us are specifically there to sort out our repressed anger issues.
And while I haven’t been a vegan for years now, I have been secretly going to the gym 6 days a week each morning before work, to help my mental focus before any other challenges can present themselves.
I’m focused on my mental health, my physical health, and my spiritual health.
My anger, my shame, and my fear from a decade ago are still inside of me; yes.
But I am learning how to unpack all of that. How to manage it. And slowly, to release it and redirect it.
And you guessed it: My typing these thousand words here now is part of the therapy for me.
This week, our family watched you take your new test and earn your next belt in Taekwondo.
No more plain yellow belt.
You received the 3rd belt in Taekwondo: Yellow with a green stripe.
It seemed quite effortless as you completed your forms, your sparring, and your board breaking; as well as counting to twenty, in Korean.
Though you normally go twice a week for lessons, you insisted on going four times this past week, to be best prepared to pass your test; to advance beyond the 2nd belt.
I suppose I was distracted by getting dinner prepped. That must explain why I didn’t even notice you bring out a yoga mat and hand weights, while wearing a sweatband around your forehead.
You had been doing sit ups with the weights for a few sets before I even processed what you were doing.
And there was no agenda of yours to bring attention to yourself. No, “Hey everybody, look at me!”
It was completely your idea to entertain yourself- and no one else.
No suggestions whatsoever from Mommy or me. You have turned our living room into your own personal gym and fitness studio.
You have to keep yourself busy and moving.
Most days it’s running across the floor, practicing what you learn at gymnastics.
And every night now before you go to bed, instead of reading you a story like I used to, you require me to throw you, and I mean throw you, into your bed at least five times.