• Cheyenne Jamerson shared a letter in the Group logo of Mental HealthMental Health group 5 months, 3 weeks ago

    Worse things to be than ugly

    I can remember the feeling clearly. I can still taste it, I can still feel the weight of it dragging on my heels, filling my lungs, and chilling my bones.
    I am grateful I made it out alive, because looking back I can see that I needed serious help, but help was not coming for me.
    I lived with severe depression, suicide ideation, low self esteem, and a handful of other BPD/BP symptoms that went undiagnosed for years.
    I was never introduced to the idea of coping skills, boundaries, self care, and I had never heard of things like self fulfilling prophecies, victim mindsets, and justification/avoidance/etc. I wish someone would have brought these things to life, because I think I may have realized sooner that I wasn’t alone or the one to blame for the awful sadness that clawed at my chest like some tortured animal.
    I began self-harming as a form of punishing myself. I believed that I was selfish for even breathing. I hated myself so much that I truly, truly believed that I deserved to get hurt and I should feel guilty because if I loved my family then I wouldn’t poison their life by being present in it.
    Often I would fall asleep in tears, praying to wake up as someone else or to not wake up at all.
    It breaks my heart sometimes when I look back. As a child, I just wanted to be loved and important, and as a teen, I just wanted to be loved and beautiful.
    I wanted to be beautiful more than anything.
    To me, beauty was something unattainable and far away.
    I really was an ugly duckling , so to speak. I don’t believe there are more than 3 photos of me from the time I was in 2nd grade to about 5th.
    The summer before 2nd grade my babysitter decided to shave my hair off. On top of being malnourished and having extreme dental issues, having no hair was enough to push me to become a social outcast.
    Those little kids treated me like I wasn’t even human.
    But every day I woke up just hoping to have a good day. I could forgive my worst enemies without blinking. Every day I just wanted to have a good day.
    But I started fighting a lot, partly because the other kids thought I was a boy and partly because I wouldn’t tolerate being bullied any longer. After some months went by, even the adults at school and around public spaces were confused about my gender, and a few had even asked me to stop saying I was a girl.
    I felt betrayed and confused. I learned during that time that I could hurt people back if they insulted me, and that love is conditional to beauty.
    I moved away after 7th grade for 2 years but was forced to move right back.
    They acted like I was a completely different person.
    Now people suddenly expected me to be female?
    I couldn’t hang out with the guys anymore, and if I did they were trying to throw game at me? I couldn’t wear whatever I wanted anymore because people couldn’t control themselves? I’m supposed to do my hair and makeup and wear dresses and walk in heels now?
    Deep down I yearned to be in touch with that femininity that had been denied to be so long ago, but it was hard.
    I tried to be grateful, because I knew some people’s journey required surgery and years of hormone therapy. To be told your something that you know your not and trying to play pretend as something else causes a pain I can’t describe, so even though I was secretly relieved I wasn’t sure how to just “be a girl.”
    I obsessed over my appearance, I would often stare at my reflection until tears welled in my eyes and whisper to myself these horrible things like, “you’re so freakin ugly. No wonder your mother drinks all the time. No wonder everyone hates you. Your so freaking stupid look at you. I wish so much that I could just beat you up, I hate you so much.”
    … It was just one vicious cycle after another.

    There are a lot of factors that led to my escape from the prison of that perspective.
    But the main one I want to share happened on my own.
    Its strange, because now I am considered “hot.” Sometimes I even feel beautiful, but not a whole lot. That’s okay with me, though. I wish that the younger me could feel even the small approvals I give myself, even the smallest kindnesses… But it wasnt until the day I came to this conclusion that any of my self esteem started to change.
    I realized… There are worse things to be than ugly.
    It may sound ridiculous or even obnoxiously obvious… But this thought had never actually occured to me before.b
    There are better things to be than pretty. There are worse things to be than ugly.
    I mean, id been through some of them. Being lost in the woods, feeling heartbroken, searching for a missing person that you care deeply about, losing a parent to prison, and being miserable were just a few of the things that I went through personally that I decided in that moment were much worse than being ugly.
    This was a breakthrough.
    I don’t NEED to be pretty. Sure I want to but do I NEED to be?
    Hell no.
    I was tired of chasing people’s love, tired of wasting so much energy on their approval. I was just plain tired.
    I realized that people couldn’t see right through me. They couldn’t see the damage beneath the surface.
    The day I stopped caring if I was ugly or beautiful changed my life. Because that’s the day I started caring about if my life was beautiful or not. I started caring about what I was doing and not about if others cared.
    This led me to getting some painful dental surgeries that ended with dentures and a normal smile, some crazy tattoos, and a few hair color choices I could have left in the bottle but mostly it led me to freedom.
    I don’t know if my story is unique or if anyone else out there is trapped by the beauty myth… But just in case I’ll say it again:
    Beauty does not define value.
    Others do not define your beauty.
    Your value is yours to see and appreciate. You set the bar for how you will be treated and respected.
    Beauty does not define importance, power, or entitlement.
    Beauty is not just appearance.
    Love yourself, you will see the change in your reflection yourself.
    You are beautiful, you are worthy, and you are human.
    There are so many worse things to be than ugly.
    -a horrible person
    -attacked by wolves
    -evil and cruel
    -dying
    -mean
    -lost
    -sad
    -going through the motions
    -uncaring, inconsiderate
    -starving
    Etc. Etc. etc.

    Cheyenne

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    • Cheyenne I just want you to know that you are understood and heard. You have grown into a beautiful flower and even flowers sprout under dirt and the mudslides. I liked your ending where you said there are so many more worse things to be than ugly because there are people who have ugly mentalities, spirits, and energy. You are beautiful from the outside and in. I’ve been verbally abused in the same way wanting to change how I look and talk but I am learning to accept myself the way that I have been created. Thank you for sharing your beautiful peace and inspiring those who have been bullied in the same way.

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