Regret has been my go-to emotion these days.
The times in my life I most regret are the times when I have
succumbed to inauthenticity. When I have not been my authentic self. When I
have turned away from myself in order to turn towards something else, and then that
something else ended up being really bad.
I can’t go back to any of those times and wake myself up. I
can’t enter those key moments and decide to listen to myself, decide to take
myself more seriously, decide that I am worth facing challenges for.
I can’t go back. That’s the whole point. That’s the one rule
in all of this. I only have now and in the future.
This recent wave of regret has been triggered by something
that feels rather silly in the context of all this existential reflection. But
still, it is real and it matters and it’s bringing up some really strong
feelings for me. It’s that Feministing contest.
Many of you were so overwhelmingly supportive and
enthusiastic when I made it into the final round of the Feministing.com “So You
Think You Can Blog” contest. I got the email on a Tuesday afternoon at work—I
had arrived at work late after spending the morning presenting a lecture on
adolescent sexuality at a Boston College class on Positive Youth Development
and then getting lunch with the professor (at Inna’s Kitchen!). I was totally
amped about the lecture and discussion and the prospect of more teaching about
sex and sexuality.
Then I got the email that I was selected as a finalist, and
I couldn’t stop shaking in disbelief. In fact, I didn’t stop shaking until I
got the email three weeks later that I wasn’t selected as a winner.
And I just think—I can’t help but feel—my understanding of my
own situation is that it was that very disbelief, that very shaking, that very
frozen-in-time, this-can’t-be-happening feeling that pulled me out of myself
and threw me into a state of inauthenticity bordering on emotional paralysis—and
now remembering that state of being is at the core of my current regret. I regret
that I didn’t slow down enough in order to enter the last round of the contest
as myself. From the minute I got the
email, I was thinking about how to fit into their club—how to write the way
they wanted me to write and write about the topics they wanted me to write
about—I wasn’t thinking about how to be myself and be true to myself. I ended
up writing blog posts that I thought were smart and well-written, but I
personally wasn’t anywhere in those posts. They could have been written by
anyone.
My biggest challenge was the one instruction they gave us—to
be timely. When I blog, it’s always timely, but to me, to my timeline. I’m
blogging about the one thing that I’ve been stuck on recently, the one piece of
my life, past or present, that is eating away at me and that I want to come to
understand by communicating it to others. I don’t tend to discuss current
events or pop culture, and I’d never written a post on-demand before. And
instead of slowing down and considering how I would proceed were I to actually
win the contest and become a more scheduled, more public blogger, I plowed
forward without reflection. I was plowing forward without myself, because I wasn’t giving myself time to catch up.
I don’t know if any of this is making sense to you. I can
only get it to make sense to me part of the time. But it’s really at the core
of what I’ve been feeling and thinking about these days, and it seemed to be
more honest and authentic than the “why I hate competitions” or the “what does
this mean about my professional identity and career goals” posts that I was
considering writing as another form of reflection on the Feministing contest.
Maybe those will be important posts for me to write at some point in the
future, but today I needed to write about regret. Because noticing this regret
about the times when I haven’t slowed down to address myself, to try to be true
to myself, to attend to my own feelings and boundaries and goals—noticing all
of that regret regarding the blog posts I wrote made me notice all the other
regrets I have, too: regrets about times when I turned away from myself in ways
that had much worse consequences than losing a contest.