Breaking Free of the Past
Everyone makes a mistake at some point in their life. Most of us
make the majority of our mistakes when we are young. Teenagers
and twenty-somethings are especially prone to make some
whoppers! After we make those big mistakes, we naturally want to
fix the problems and get on to better things. Nobody likes to
sit in mistakes they made during their youth for the rest of
their lives. Some mistakes do follow us forever, but that does
not change the fact that we still want to move onwards and
upwards towards better days.
If you have ever made really big mistakes and lived a
dysfunctional or otherwise bad lifestyle for awhile, then you
know how hard it is to get the people around you to accept that
you have changed and you are no longer making those bad choices
or embracing the negative philosophies. One of the most
difficult and painful aspects of pulling yourself together is
finding out that your friends and family do not believe you that
you have changed. Yes, it is important for you to change for
yourself and not for others, so you push yourself despite the
lack of emotional support, but it still hurts. And, I am not
talking about wanting to be seen as new and different when you
haven't done the work needed to really change your life. I'm
talking about after having made the changes to improve your
life, and people still see you as the old destructive person
that you used to be.
One of the biggest reasons that people fail at making permanent
positive changes is not a lack of effort or a lack of support.
Most of our people say that they support us in our decisions to
improve ourselves. It is the lack of belief that we have
actually accomplished the changes. After we work and work to
create a new reality for ourselves our families and our peers
still treat us like we are that other version of ourselves that
made all of the mistakes and embraced all of those
self-destructive choices. It's as if we are never really able to
get those who knew us when we were bad to really forgive and
forget on the deepest level needed. A piece of them always sees
that ugly piece of us even if we have grown, matured, and become
so much better than we used to be.
Last year, a singer by the name of Fantasia Barrino won the
hearts of Americans on the hit television show, American Idol.
She has a beautiful gift of song and entertainment to offer the
world. She is unique, passionate, and powerfully authentic in a
world of cookie-cutter pop stars that all sound the same on the
radio. Fantasia is a single mother. She never hid from us the
fact that she fell in love with a preacher's boy and they had a
child out of wedlock. She also did not hide from us that he had
physically abused her and that is why she left him.
Part of what made her so impressive is that instead of sitting
home on welfare whining and crying about being a victim, she
pulled herself up by her bootstraps and started working long
hard hours on her music career and doing whatever it took to
make a better life for herself and for her daughter. Fantasia's
family, church, and entire community loved her and fully
supported her in her dreams of becoming the next American Idol.
She knew how blessed she was to have such a wonderful support
system and became a role model to other single mothers that you
can change your life with hard work and a passionate fire in
your heart. She always made sure to let people know that it was
her religious faith and her family that got her through the hard
times.
One of the songs on her first CD is called "Baby Mama." The
song cheers single mothers on as they struggle through trying to
keep a job and pay for quality day care for their children. It
does not tell us that we should chose that path, but that if you
have, her heart goes out to you because she's been there and
knows first hand how hard it is. The song is telling single
mothers not to give up the battle for independence and
self-sufficiency. You would think that she was telling teenage
girls to all go out and get themselves pregnant the way the
media attacked her. I cannot tell you how many Christian groups
attacked her for that song. They kept saying that she is a role
model promoting unprotected sex and that she was glamorizing
single parenthood. They act as if once she screwed up she was
supposed to carry that label for the rest of her life. She is
not supposed to ever encourage others in the same situation to
not give up and quit. Screw 'em Fantasia! You keep cheering
those girls on to pull themselves together. You are NOT a poster
child for bad choices. You are a beautiful role model of how
anyone can come from hell and find their way back into a
heavenly life.
I wish I could tell all of you that there's some magical
formula I've learned to get people to respect you and to see you
as fresh and new once you've pulled your life back together. You
work so hard to create a new self-image and some people refuse
to see it. But the truth is some people never do get a clue.
They really don't know what it takes to come back from a really
bad lifestyle. They don't know you, the real you who fought and
struggled to make something of yourself. I wish I could tell all
of you how to not give a darn what others think of you, but that
is a very private and personal journey for each of us. You have
to remember that you are making positive changes in your life
because the changes benefit you and not because you are trying
to win a popularity contest.
Sometimes the best solution is to make a fresh start in a fresh
location. After you have done the spiritual, emotional, and
psychological work to turn your life around, move away from the
naysayers who would treat you as if you have never changed. Do
not allow anyone to convince you that once you make a mistake
that you are to be labeled as damaged goods for the rest of your
life. Surround yourself with people who do not know or do not
care that once upon a time you were a mess. And even if it seems
as if you are the only person in the world who recognizes that
you have changed, know that you are right and that you are a new
person making a new life.
Copyright 2005, Skye Thomas, Tomorrow's Edge