10/18/11

Past the road of broken dreams.

As I’m anxiously trying to catch up with my school work, my mom calls me downstairs. She has on her lap a stack of papers – a time capsule of important documents my dad has collected over his lifetime.

My mom hands me my child immunization record – double-sided in English and Korean – something I asked her in preparation for my trip to Tanzania. Measles, Mumps, Hepatitis B, and a entire slew of shots I had as a child came rushing back into my memory. She told me to thank my dad for storing such important documents safely in his office.

College transcripts. Immigration papers. My dad had saved absolutely everything. She showed me the English-Korean manual my dad had created during his time in the army – a tool that many soldiers found very useful during their time there. She laughed and smiled as my dad passed to her all of the national, school, and newspaper awards for excellence in art and poetry as a child. There were a good ten of them. All very large and prestigious. They dated back to the time when he was in preschool and primary school.

I smiled with my mom as I looked through all of these wonderful awards. My dad said that his grandmother had had him submit his art and poetry everywhere as a child but as soon as he had entered grade school, his father – my grandfather – never let him practice his talent. So I as I looked at the papers from my father’s past, I couldn’t help but feel sad. He had never been allowed to pursue his dreams by his father in his youth. Along with that, a variety of other reasons led to my father hating my grandfather.

I always knew my father was smart. He was talented, artistic, witty, and very well versed in the arts. He still is, actually. But he’s now a real estate agent and he’s not ashamed to say he became one for the money. When I look at my dad, and the stack of papers in my mother’s lap, I see a road of broken dreams. I see pain. I see sadness. And I see his perseverance through it all.

I’ve never been on good terms with my father. Although, I don’t believe I was ever as talented as my dad was in his youth, I did inherit his love of writing and the arts. Music and writing are my muses, and as a child, I was allowed to pursue them. I was never encouraged by my father. He never really made my recitals or concerts. He’s never read anything I read. He wasn’t very involved when I was growing up. But he was adamantly against either my brother and I pursuing a degree or career in the arts. Ever since I was a child, I was told nothing but horror stories about the dead ends in the arts. We had fights. I honestly believe that the fighting would have been a lot worse if I had been dead set on arts (which I’m not, fortunately for him).

I could easily hate my father, for not letting me take my life fully in my own hands, much like his father did for him. But I know his past. I know his talents. I know, as I stare at those awards, that my dad grew up to be a broken man. And since I understand that, I can’t hate him. He has his reasons. But that’s all the more reason why I don’t listen to him.

I have hopes. I have dreams and passions that I’m in pursuit of every day. It is my privilege – something I am so very grateful for. So even if my dreams right now aren’t what my dad had in mind, I am pursuing them. Because when I see my dad, I want to prove him wrong. I want him to see that I can make my dreams come true – that I can be successful and happy without sacrificing my passions. I want him to understand my passion and be proud of what I’m doing with my life.

I want him to know that even though he couldn’t pursue his dreams, his daughter is.

11/26/10

My Drug.

One of my great hobbies is to write out personal essays. Another is to write fiction. I wrote the following essay a couple of months ago by combining the two. It’s very much a dramatized version of what I have gone through as a teenager but completely the truth.

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I love praise.

I’m intoxicated with it.

It’s the top reason why I worked so hard through school. From a very early age I grew addicted to that warm fuzzy feeling that I felt when receiving an affectionate pat on the head or an appreciative smile. A compliment was a high I lived for; all the more a thirst that became more difficult to quench as I grew older.

I had always done well in school, driven by my longing for praise. But I strived for more than that: I had to be praised for anything and everything that I did, academic or not, lest I go into withdrawal. Thus, I began unknowingly to live for others, casting aside any thoughts and opinions that may clash with their own. I became a people-pleaser, selling myself for the love of others.

I thought nothing of my mentality: I was always the good girl, I hardly got into trouble – what harm was I doing anyone? There was nothing wrong with being hooked on praise. It merely made me into a better person.

I was in denial. It wasn’t until far into my adolescence that I truly felt the side effects of my addiction.

Mood swings. Bouts of depression. One absent-minded statement by someone could send my head reeling for the rest of the day, trying to figure out why and what I did to make them say such a thing. I closed myself off from everyone else, keeping up a facade of a smile in order to maintain my lifestyle, bottling up any conflicting feelings inside. I became overly self-conscious, obsessed with what people thought of me – afraid of what they could say. Overt jealousy took over me for those I admired, leaving me wondering in vain why I could not be like them. I was, in short, a mess. But I kept to myself, unwilling to cry for help to even my loved ones lest they thought less of me. I would often cry myself to sleep.

No one held a confrontation for me. It was I who saved myself when I looked in the mirror one morning and realized what I had become. I realized in horror that by feeding my addiction I had lost sight of myself. I didn’t know who I was and I feared who I would become if this went on. I broke down.

I finally took up the courage and called up a friend, pleading for her help. I was in mental rehab for many months.

It’s been over a year since my severe breakdown. I won’t lie, I have had times where I’ve cried for hours since then, but I always stand up stronger than I was before. I’m getting better.

Praise is not something I can avoid for the rest of my life. But I’ve learned that my own thoughts, concerns, and beliefs are more valuable than the opinions of others. I’m slowly teaching myself to put myself first in every aspect of my life and to embrace who I am – who I’m building myself to be.

But it’s difficult to throw away a lifestyle I’ve lived with for nearly eighteen years. I find that the consequences of my past addiction often creep back through me and I start to worry like I used to. I question the thoughts of my dearest friends and become disgusted with myself for even thinking such things. The old me believes that they’d think me an inconsiderate friend while the present me knows such petty matters wouldn’t make a dent in our friendship.

I just need to remember: I do not need to be perfect. I do not need to comply to everyone’s wishes and needs. I do not need praise to survive.

I will live for myself.